Those are different facts. atomic number is total of protons and neutrons.
The atomic number is 88 and the atomic mass is 226
83.98 amu is the Atomic Mass, 36 is the atomic number.
Two atoms with the same atomic number but different atomic weight are known as isotopes. Isotopes have the same number of protons and electrons, but a different number of neutrons, resulting in different atomic weights. For example, carbon-12 and carbon-14 are isotopes of carbon with the same atomic number (6) but different atomic weights due to a difference in neutron count.
No, the atomic mass is not equal to the atomic number. The atomic number represents the number of protons in an atom's nucleus, while the atomic mass is the sum of protons and neutrons in the nucleus. The atomic mass can differ from the atomic number, especially due to the presence of neutrons.
The atomic mass of carbon is about 12.01 atomic mass units. The atomic number of carbon is 6, indicating the number of protons in its nucleus.
The atomic number is the number of a chemical element in the periodic table of Mendeleev; the atomic number is equal to the number of protons and electrons. The atomic mass is the mass of an atom expressed in relative atomic mass units.
There is no element with an atomic number of 12 and an atomic mass of 8. Atomic number corresponds to the number of protons in an atom, while atomic mass is the sum of protons and neutrons. The atomic number of an element cannot be smaller than its atomic mass.
Atomic number equals the number of protons, the (atomic) mass number equals the sum of (the number of) protons and neutrons of the same element.The answer is: they're differing in the number of neutrons(Mathematically: Where A = p and M = p + n, the difference in A and M is n)
Atomic number for p is 15. atomic mass for p is 31.
The atomic mass of Kr (Krypton) is 83.798 amu, and its atomic number is 36.
Atomic mass minus atomic number will give you the average number of neutrons in that element. Bear in mind that atomic mass is based on the actual weight of that element, which is the result of whatever isotopes appear in nature; it is rarely based on only a single isotope.
Atomic number 6, atomic mass 12.