Avogadro Day



  • Mole Day - Avogadro's Number. Search this site. Happy Mole Day!! Celebrations of Mole Day. Additional Pages.
  • Celebrated annually on October 23 from 6:02 a.m. To 6:02 p.m., Mole Daycommemorates Avogadro's Number (6.02 x 10 23), which is a basic measuring unit in chemistry. Find ways to celebrate this chemistry “holiday” with the links below. Mole Day also typically falls during National Chemistry Week.

The time and date are derived from the Avogadro number, which is approximately 6.02 × 1023, defining the number of particles (atoms or molecules) in one mole (mol) of substance, one of the seven base SI units. What did Avogadro put into the pockets of his tweed suit? Can you name two movies that Avogadro really liked? What was Avogadro's best day in golf? How did Avogadro send a secret message with his walkie-talkie? What is Avogadro's favorite kind of music? Which Walt Disney characters was Avogadro fond of?

Written by: Science Made Fun! on October 23, 2013 @ 4:49 pm

Avogadro DayAvogadro open day roma

Today, October 23 (or 10/23, as it’s written the American way), from 6:02 am to 6:02 pm, is Mole Day. No, it’s not a day for freckles, spies, Mexican sauce, or cute little burrowing mammals. Rather it’s the day to celebrate the chemical unit the “mole.”

Number

What is a mole, you ask, having forgotten high school chemistry. A mole of something is 6.02 x 10^23 of it (kind of like a dozen of eggs is 12 eggs, a mole of eggs is 602,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 eggs*.)

*okay, technically, it’s 602,214,129,270,000,000,000,000 eggs (give or take a few quintillion – scientists can’t agree on the exact number).

So, with that out of the way, here are 5 fun facts about the mole and Mole Day:

1. The mole is attributed to 18th century Italian scientist Amedeo Avogadro, whose full name is Lorenzo Romano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro di Queregna e di Cerreto. Man, that’s a long name, but it somehow fits the long number that now bears his name (6.02 x 10^23 is called Avogadro’s Constant). His parents called him Amedeo Carlo Avogadro.

Avogadro Day

We won’t get into the technical aspects, but in 1811 Avogadro proposed a law (now known as Avogadro’s Law) stating that equal volume of all gasses, at the same temperature and pressure, have the same number of molecules.

As with many scientific accomplishments of that age, Avogadro’s findings were promptly ignored. It took about a hundred years for the scientific community to get around to appreciating what he’s done. In 1909, French chemist and Nobel laureate Jean Baptiste Perrin proposed that quantity of molecules be called “Avogadro’s Constant.”

2. Mole Day was proposed in an article in The Science Teacher in early 1980s. Inspired by the article, Maurice Oehler, a chemistry teacher (now retired) in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, created the National Mole Day Foundation in 1991.

3. Did you know that the Mole Day has annual themes? Here they are:

1991The Mole The Merrier
1992Go For The Mole
1993Mole Out The Barrel
1994An Ace in The Mole
1995Moledi Gras
1996Molemorial Day
1997We Dig Chemistry
1998Ride the Molercoaster
1999It’s A MOLE World
2000Celebrate the Molennium
2001Molar Odyssey
2002Molar Reflections
2003Rock ‘n Mole
2004Pi a la MOLE
2005Moles-Go-Round
2006Mole Madness
2007Secret Agent Double Mole Seven in Moles are Forever
2008Remember the Alamole
2009Molar Express
2010Moles of the Round Table
2011Molar Eclipse
2012Animole Kingdom

4. To help you celebrate, here’s the Molemorial Day song by Michael Offutt (that’s the theme of the Mole Day in 1996, when Offutt recorded the song). Actually Offutt created a whole album, titled “Molennium,” filled with songs about the mole.

5. As you can probably guess, a mole (6.02 x 10^23) is a VERY large number. But, what does a mole of moles look like? What if we release a mole of moles onto our planet? xkcd explains:

An eastern mole (Scalopus aquaticus) weighs about 75 grams, which means a mole of moles weighs (6.022×10^23)×75g≈4.52×10^22kg.

That’s a little over half the mass of our moon.

Mammals are largely water. A kilogram of water takes up a liter of volume, so if the moles weigh 4.52×10^22 kilograms, they take up about 4.52×10^22 liters of volume. You might notice that we’re ignoring the pockets of space between the moles. In a moment, you’ll see why.

Day

The cube root of 4.52×10^22 liters is 3,562 kilometers, which means we’re talking about a sphere with a radius of 2,210 kilometers, or a cube 2,213 miles on each edge. (That’s a neat coincidence I’ve never noticed before—a cubic mile happens to be almost exactly 4/3pi cubic kilometers, so a sphere with a radius of X kilometers has the same volume as a cube that’s X miles on each side.)

If these moles were released onto the Earth’s surface, they’d fill it up to 80 kilometers deep—just about to the (former) edge of space:

Tags: avogadro's law, Elementary Science, fun facts for mole day, fun science, fun science holidays, fun science of mole, fun science of mole day, high touch high tech, mole day, national mole day, october 23rd, science fun, science holiday, science made fun

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Avogadro Day

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