60 is abundant.
Let the number be N, then (N/100) x 7 = 60 or (7N/100) = 60 or 7N = 6000 or N = 6000/7 = 857.1428571
abundant
-55
67 is an abundant number.
60 is abundant.
10. The way this is derived is by dividing 60 by n (60/n). So if n is 1, then 60/n=60. Other Examples: 60/2=30 60/4=15 6th number: 60/6=10
Let the number be N, then (N/100) x 7 = 60 or (7N/100) = 60 or 7N = 6000 or N = 6000/7 = 857.1428571
abundant
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, 30, 60.
0.6*N 0.6*N 0.6*N 0.6*N
m = 60*n where m is the number of minutes.
-55
If a number is not abundant it cannot be made abundant!
The atom with 28 protons and a mass number of 60 is Nickel (Ni). This is determined by adding the number of protons (atomic number) to the number of neutrons (mass number - atomic number).
No, 29 is not an abundant number.
abundant