Difference of 95 and 36 is 95 - 36 = 59 Then 27 more than the difference is 59 + 27 = 86
59.
70.
Well, isn't that just a happy little math problem! In the number sentence 59 - 32 = 27, the minuend is 59. The minuend is the number you start with, like the big tree in a painting that sets the scene for the rest of the landscape to come alive.
If you meant: 31 37 41 43 47 53 then the next prime number is 59
59 is the next number in this series.
42 is the next number in this sequence. This number sequence is adding the next prime number to the last number. So 1 + 2 = 3. Then 3 + 3 = 6, 6 + 5 = 11, 11 + 7 = 18, 18 + 11 = 29. The next prime number after 11 is 13, so 29 + 13 = 42. The next numbers would be 59 (42+17), 78 (59+19), and 101 (78+23)
It is 1 because 59 is a prime number
61
If the question is, What is the missing number in the sequence 7, 11, 23, ?, 167? Then each number is 3 times the previous number then deduct 10. 3 x 7 = 21 - 10 = 11 3 x 11= 33 - 10 = 23 3 x 23 = 69 - 10 = 59......the missing number 3 x 59 = 177 - 10 = 167 3 x 167 = 501 - 10 = 491....the next number in the sequence.
Cobalt-59 has 27 electrons because it has 27 protons, which balance the charge of the 27 electrons.
The mass number of an atom is the sum of its protons and neutrons. Cobalt has an atomic number of 27, so it has 27 protons. If it has 32 neutrons, then the mass number would be 27 (protons) + 32 (neutrons) = 59.
Difference of 95 and 36 is 95 - 36 = 59 Then 27 more than the difference is 59 + 27 = 86
59.
Oh, dude, the minuend in the number sentence 59 minus 32 equals 27 is 59. It's like the number that's getting subtracted from, you know? So, in this case, 59 is just chilling there, waiting for 32 to take away its spotlight and become 27. Cool math stuff, right?
It will be 10 then 60 then 11 then 61 and so on
For the isotope with an atomic mass of 59, which is cobalt-59, it has 27 protons and 32 neutrons. For cobalt-60, it has 27 protons and 33 neutrons. This is because the atomic mass includes both protons and neutrons, so subtracting the atomic number (equal to the number of protons) from the atomic mass gives the number of neutrons.