In chemistry, one need not sweat the subatomic details.
This is because most of the rules of chemistry were written before the atom's structure was fully understood.
The chemical formula notation is not very complex.
Different atoms have different abbreviations, which can be seen on the periodic table.
These abbreviations have either one or two letters, where the first is capitalized.
A chemical formula is a string of these abbreviations with not spaces.
When more than one of a given atom is present in a chemical, the number of times this atom is present is placed as a
subscript just after the atom's abbreviation.
When the formula for a chemical ion is written, the positive or negative charge is written as a number in
superscript at the end of the formula.
In chemistry, there are names for certain groupings which commonly appear in notable chemicals. The aforementioned
nitrate (NO
3-) is one such example. Notice how a the nitrate ion has a negative (-) charge of magnitude one, two different atoms, one nitrogen (N) and three oxygen (O).