Avogadro is a 8 letter English word.
You can make 132 anagrams from letters in Avogadro (aadgoorv).
Like the atomic theory itself, Avogadro's law is an outcome of physical work and of physical reasoning.
It is to the molecule, considered as the unit of physical structure, that Avogadro's law applies.
This deduction from Avogadro's law is now a part and parcel of our general chemical knowledge.
The mental surroundings of the chemists of that age did not allow them fully to appreciate the work of Avogadro.
This number, by the way, is known to science as "Avogadro's Constant."
Avogadro's hypothesis gave the chemist a definition of "molecule;" it also gave him a definition of "atom."
We make use of Avogadro's law and of the definition of "atom" which has been deduced from it (see p. 142).
In 1843 Charles Gerhardt proposed to use the law of Avogadro as a basis for the determination of atomic weights.
In 1811 Avogadro distinguished between the ultimate particles of compounds and elements.
Of the laws and hypotheses concerning gases, the one that is perhaps of most importance to chemistry is Avogadro's hypothesis.