Gold and silver are different mass due to their different atomic weights. For instance gold is heavier than silver because Gold's atomic number is 79 while silver is 47.
The mass of silver produced is equal to the mass of copper used, based on the Law of Conservation of Mass. So, 6.35 g of copper will produce 6.35 g of silver.
The Talent is an ancient unit of mass equal to 26 kg, as well as a unit of value equal to this amount of pure silver. 1 talent of silver is approximately 57.2 pounds.
To calculate the number of moles, we need to use the molar mass of silver, which is 107.87 g/mol. Divide the given mass by the molar mass to get the number of moles. Therefore, 129 g of silver is equal to approximately 1.2 moles of silver.
The maximum mass for a golf ball is 45.93 grams.
The amount of water displaced by 500 grams of silver would be equal to the volume of the silver. To calculate this, you would need to divide the mass of the silver by the density of silver (which is 10.49 g/cm^3). This will give you the volume of the silver, which is equal to the volume of water displaced.
Because it takes more ping-pong balls to contribute any unit of mass than the number of golf balls required to contribute the same mass. This stems from the fact that one golf ball has more mass than one ping-pong ball.
Silver chloride - AgClAg (107.89 grams) + Cl (35.45 grams) = 143.34 grams
gold is found in fewer amounts then silver moles of silver are heavier than moles of gold silver has a bright gray color gold has a bright yellow color
The atomic number for Silver (Ag) on the periodic table is 47. The average atomic weight is about 107.87, showing that silver normally has more neutrons than protons. (If all silver atoms had equal neutrons and protons, it would have an atomic weight of about 94).
The Atomic Mass of silver is 107.8682 amu (atomic mass units).
No, silver is NOT equal to 10.5 .
To calculate the mass of silver chloride needed to plate 285mg of pure silver, you can start by determining the mass of silver in the silver chloride. Since silver chloride contains 75.27% silver, the mass of silver in the silver chloride is 0.7527 * mass of silver chloride. Once you have the mass of silver in the silver chloride, you can set up a ratio to find the mass of silver chloride needed to plate 285mg of pure silver.