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Q: How many different isotopes of silver are listed here 10847X10848X11047X10946X10747X?
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Do all the atoms of silver look alike?

As an element, silver has several isotopes (with different numbers of neutrons) but all atoms of an isotope will be identical, i.e. all atoms of the isotope 107Ag will be equivalent (look the same), all atoms of 109Ag will be equivalent - but atoms of 107Ag will be different from atoms of 109Ag. To the naked eye, there is no difference in the appearance of ordinary silver (silver-107 or silver-109) and that of its synthetic radioactive isotopes (mainly silver-105, 106, 108, 111).


How many number of isotopes does silver have?

Silver hastwo stable isotopes107Ag and 109Ag. 107Ag is the more abundant stable isotope. 28 radioisotopes have been characterized.


Why do isotopes of the same element have the same chemical behavior?

Chemical properties of a element is governed by ELECTRONIC CONFIGURATION of that element. As isotopes of same element have identical electronic configurations, their chemical properties are same.


How many neutrons are usually found in the nucleus of an atom of silver?

Silver has the atomic number (number of protons) 47; two stable isotopes are 107Ag and 109 Ag. Those would have 107 - 47 = 60, and 109 - 47 = 62 neutrons, respectively. 107Ag is more abundant, but the difference in abundance is not much; natural silver contains about the same amount of both isotopes.Silver has the atomic number (number of protons) 47; two stable isotopes are 107Ag and 109 Ag. Those would have 107 - 47 = 60, and 109 - 47 = 62 neutrons, respectively. 107Ag is more abundant, but the difference in abundance is not much; natural silver contains about the same amount of both isotopes.Silver has the atomic number (number of protons) 47; two stable isotopes are 107Ag and 109 Ag. Those would have 107 - 47 = 60, and 109 - 47 = 62 neutrons, respectively. 107Ag is more abundant, but the difference in abundance is not much; natural silver contains about the same amount of both isotopes.Silver has the atomic number (number of protons) 47; two stable isotopes are 107Ag and 109 Ag. Those would have 107 - 47 = 60, and 109 - 47 = 62 neutrons, respectively. 107Ag is more abundant, but the difference in abundance is not much; natural silver contains about the same amount of both isotopes.


What is the alpha and beta ray of silver -111?

There is only one type of alpha particle - a helium-4 nucleus. A beta particle can either be an electron or an anti-electron. However, consulting the Wikipedia article "Isotopes of silver", it seems that silver-111 has a beta-minus decay - that means that it emits a regular electron (which has a negative charge).

Related questions

Do all the atoms of silver look alike?

As an element, silver has several isotopes (with different numbers of neutrons) but all atoms of an isotope will be identical, i.e. all atoms of the isotope 107Ag will be equivalent (look the same), all atoms of 109Ag will be equivalent - but atoms of 107Ag will be different from atoms of 109Ag. To the naked eye, there is no difference in the appearance of ordinary silver (silver-107 or silver-109) and that of its synthetic radioactive isotopes (mainly silver-105, 106, 108, 111).


Are the isotopes of silver radioactive?

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Do all atoms of the same element have the same number of isotopes?

This question is misguided. Atoms do not have isotopes. In a sample of an element there are many atoms. They will all have the same number of protons in their nuclei, that's what makes them the same element. Individual atoms may have different numbers of neutrons, if this happens they are called isotopes. For instance in silver, all the atoms have 47 protons, but some of them have 60 neutrons and some have 62. We say that silver has two stable isotopes. Perhaps your question should be 'Do all atoms of the same element have the same number of neutrons?'


When a silver isomer is created how long can it take before it cools?

See the list of silver isotopes and isomers at the link below.


Is gold radioactive?

No isotope of silver ordinarily found in nature is radioactive. Like all elements, silver has synthetic radioactive isotopes.Silver is not radio active, none of silver's isotopes have radio activity.ur welcome!


What is the number of neutrons in the element of silver?

For the natural isotopes: - 107Ag has 60 neutrons - 109Ag has 62 neutrons


Suppose that 273g of one substance listed zinc silver lead displaces 26ml of water What is the substance?

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What is the mass number of sliver?

Mass number is a property of isotopes, not elements themselves. Naturally occurring silver is a mixture of isotopes with mass numbers 107 and 109, with an average atomic mass of 107.9.


How many neutrons does the atom silver have?

== silver-107 and silver-109 have 60 and 62 neutrons, respectively. There are many isotopes of silver having a neutron count from 46 to 83.


What is the number of neutrons in the element silver?

Silver has 2 different naturally occurring isotopes:Silver-107 (51.35%) - 60 neutrons - mass 106.9389 amuSilver-109 (48.65%) - 62 neutrons - mass 108.9393 amuThe masses in amu differ from the mass number of the isotope because of the "mass defect, which in silver is slightly negative as is typical of elements in the middle of the binding energy curve. Also the mass of Silver on the periodic table of 107.912 amu is a weighted average the two isotopes masses. This is the number the chemist wants as he rarely cares about isotopes. If you want to count neutrons, you need a table of the isotopes of the elements, not just a periodic table. This is available in nuclear engineering, health physics, etc. texts.


If the mass of Ag-107 is 106.905 what is the mass of Ag-109?

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Why do isotopes of the same element have the same chemical behavior?

Chemical properties of a element is governed by ELECTRONIC CONFIGURATION of that element. As isotopes of same element have identical electronic configurations, their chemical properties are same.