QUESTION IMAGE
Question
question.
can you measure the mass of a single atom with a normal laboratory
scale like in the simulation?
○ yes, if the atom is stable
○ yes, if you use a sensitive enough scale
○ no, because atoms do not have mass
○ no, atoms are too small to weigh individually with standard lab equipment
Brief Explanations
To determine the answer, we analyze each option:
- "Yes, if the atom is stable": Stability of an atom doesn't make it measurable by a normal lab scale. Atoms are extremely small, so this is incorrect.
- "Yes, if you use a sensitive enough scale": Normal laboratory scales (even sensitive ones) can't measure a single atom's mass. Specialized equipment like mass spectrometers are needed, not standard lab scales. So this is wrong.
- "No, because atoms do not have mass": Atoms do have mass (e.g., protons, neutrons, electrons contribute to mass), so this is incorrect.
- "No, atoms are too small to weigh individually with standard lab equipment": Atoms are submicroscopic, and standard lab scales (like those used in simulations for larger objects) can't detect the mass of a single atom. This is correct.
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D. No, atoms are too small to weigh individually with standard lab equipment