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Titanium has 5 stable isotopes with atomic masses ranging from 46-50.
Natural Titanium has 5 stable isotopes: 46Ti, 47Ti, 48Ti, 49Ti and 50Ti.
Titanium has 4 radioactive isotopes, all of which are artifically made.
Titanium has five stable isotopes and 21 radioisotopes. The element has the symbol Ti and atomic number 22. It was discovered by William Gregor in 1791
Titanium is an element that has 5 naturally occurring isotopes.
There are 22 protons in a titanium atom, but most contain 26 neutrons. Stable isotopes have numbers of neutrons ranging from 24 to 28.
There are 5 stable isotopes of Titanium, having mass numbers: 46, 47, 48, 49, 50. The measured masses are: 45.99695, 46.99650, 47.96312, 48.96339, 49.96058 respectively. The averaged mass of natural Titanium is: 47.890
Assuming you mean "titanium", and assuming you mean the equation for the nuclear decay: there are many different of those, since titanium (like just about many elements) has many different isotopes.
No, titanium is a metal.
It is one of the least abundant isotopes of titanium which takes a lesser value than 0.1%.
Nickel, and rare isotopes of Iron
Titanium is an element that has 5 naturally occurring isotopes.
There are 22 protons in a titanium atom, but most contain 26 neutrons. Stable isotopes have numbers of neutrons ranging from 24 to 28.
Naturally occurring scandium 45Sc is stable. However synthetic isotopes of scandium can have 36 to 60 nucleons. Isotopes with masses above the stable isotope decay through beta emission into isotopes of titanium. Isotopes below the stable variety decay, mainly by electron capture, into isotopes of calcium.
There are 5 stable isotopes of Titanium, having mass numbers: 46, 47, 48, 49, 50. The measured masses are: 45.99695, 46.99650, 47.96312, 48.96339, 49.96058 respectively. The averaged mass of natural Titanium is: 47.890
Not sure what you mean by "of 22"; if that's supposed to be an element number, you must also specify the specific isotope.Element #22 is titanium; you can check the Wikipedia article "Isotopes of titanium", to see the different half-lives.
If you mean lessening the weight of titanium, just go to a place with less gravity; weight is a force found by multiplying the mass of an object and the acceleration due to gravity. For the rest of this answer, I'll assume you mean "mass." Titanium is an element on the periodic table. An element can be classified by the number of protons it has in its nucleus. However, there may be different isotopes of a given element; Carbon-12 refers to an atom of carbon with 6 protons and 6 neutrons; Carbon-14, often used in radiodating, refers to an atom of carbon with 6 protons and 8 neutrons. A quick search shows that titanium has multiple isotopes. According to wikipedia, five of these isotopes are stable. As far as lessening the mass of titanium atomically, there could be some nuclear decay that removes a neutron. Such a procedure, however, would be very costly. Another possibility of reducing the mass of titanium could be if one used it in an alloy. This is kinda cheating, as it's not reducing the mass of titanium but rather doping it with other metals. This wouldn't reduce the mass, as the same amount of titanium would still remain there, but it might reduce the total density of the metal.
The atomic number of titanium is 22, so it as 22 protonsin its nucleus, regardless of which isotope we're looking at. If the atomic mass of titanium (Ti) is 46, it has 46 - 22 or 24 neutrons in its nucleus. This is Ti-46, or 2246Ti, and its the lightest of the 5 stable isotopes of titanium. Use the link below for more information.
Assuming you mean "titanium", and assuming you mean the equation for the nuclear decay: there are many different of those, since titanium (like just about many elements) has many different isotopes.
Titanium is a chemical element (symbol Ti) and contain only titanium atoms. This atom is formed from: 22 Protons 22 Electrons The number of neutrons is different for each isotope; between 24 an 28 neutrons for the stable isotopes of titanium. hi josh
what does titanium does? what does titanium does?