A mole is equal to 6.022 x 1023. This number is called Avagadros number. A mole is generally abreiviated as "n".
Take percent abundance times atomic mass for each isotope then add all up for average atomic mass.
That depends what it is 4.06 percent of. 4.06 of one is equal to 0.0406.
No, one fourth percent isn't equal to 25 percent. One fourth percent = 1/4% = .25% = .0025.
13 GeV
No, the two concepts are quite unrelated.
Yes.
Yes - as long as the pressure and temperature are constant.
Type your answer here...they all be equal to that element's atomic mass in grams.
1 mole of O (oxygen) weighs 15. 9996 grams. By definition, 1 mole of any element is equal to its atomic weight expressed in grams. 1 mole is equal to 6.02 x 1023 atoms of that element.
no The mole contain a number of atoms equal to number of atoms in 12 g of carbon-12. The atomic mass unit is equal to one-twelfth the mass of a carbon-12 atom or 1,660538921(73)×10−27 kg.
The atomic mass, in grams, is the mass of one mole of atoms.
Since one mole is 6.02e23 of any atom, the atomic weight is equal to one mole of any element. For example, one mole of Ca is 40.08, one mole of S is 32.07. Thus being said, one mole of krypton is 83.80!
A mole is used to measure the amount of substance.1 mole of any substance contains 6.023 x 1023 molecules of that substance. 1 mole of a substance has mass equal to the atomic weight or molecular weight expressed in grams. Note:The number "6.023 x 1023" is called Avogadro's Number
There is no general exact relationship, because of the existence of neutrons in the nuclei of almost all elements and the lack of effect of neutrons on atomic number. An atom's gram atomic mass, however, is equal to the mass of one mole of the atoms in question.
The mole is the atomic weight expressed in grams.
No, 35.45 is the atomic mass. The number of protons is equal to the atomic number (17). The atomic mass tells how much one mole of that substance weighs in grams.