The given question is incomplete. The complete question is:
A brick has a mass of 4.0 kg and the earth has a mass of [tex]6.0\times 10^{27}g[/tex] Use this information to answer the questions below. Be sure your answers have the correct number of significant digits. What is the mass of 1 mole of bricks? Round your answer to 2 significant digits. How many moles of bricks have a mass equal to the mass of the Earth? Round your answer to 2 significant digits.
Answer: The mass of 1 mole of bricks is [tex]2.4\times 10^{27}g[/tex]
2.5 moles of bricks have a mass equal to the mass of the Earth
Explanation:
According to avogadro's law, 1 mole of every substance weighs equal to its molecular mass and contains avogadro's number [tex]6.023\times 10^{23}[/tex] of particles.
Mass of 1 brick = 4.0 kg = 4000 g (1kg=1000g)
Thus mass of 1 mole of brick or [tex]6.023\times 10^{23}[/tex] bricks will be = [tex]\frac{4000g}{1}\times 6.023\times 10^{23}=2.4\times 10^{27}g[/tex]
The mass of 1 mole of bricks is [tex]2.4\times 10^{27}g[/tex]
Now [tex]2.4\times 10^{27}g[/tex] will correspond to = 1 mole of bricks
[tex]6.0\times 10^{27}g[/tex] will correspond to =[tex]\frac{1}{2.4\times 10^{27}}\times 6.0\times 10^{27}=2.5moles[/tex]
2.5 moles of bricks have a mass equal to the mass of the Earth