No. On average a sulfur atom is twice the mass of an oxygen atom.
By number of atoms it has more hydrogen, by mass it has more oxygen. Each water molecule contains two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. However, a typical oxygen atom has about 16 times the mass of a typical hydrogen atom.
The gram-atomic mass of sulphur is 32 and that of oxygen is 16, to two significant digits. Therefore, the mass of oxygen with the same number of atoms as 64 grams of sulphur can be found from the proportion m/64 = 16/32, or m = 32 grams.
because its impossible for an atom to have a mass
The hydrogen molecule, H2, contains two hydrogen atoms and thus, has twice the mass of a single hydrogen atom.
CO2 has more than twice the mass of H2O. One Hydrogen atom weighs around 1 unit, while an oxygen atom is around 16 so a Water molecule is around 18 units. Carbon has around 12 units of mass. When you add the two Oxygen Molecules you get 44 units of mass for each CO2 molecule.
They don't. Sulphur has about twice the atomic mass of oxygen.
lithium
Molar mass of it is 32gmol-1. It is twice than an atom.
Sulphur has a molar mass of 32.065. Carbon has a molar mass of 12.01. 32.065 / 12.01 = 2.67. So an sulphur atom is 2.67 heavier than an carbon atom.
lithium 6
28 mass of oxygen
Sulphur: symbol S; at. no. 16; at. wt. 32: One Gram Mole of Sulphur weights 32 gm.
The atomic mass of an oxygen atom depends on which isotope of oxygen you are referring to. The AVERAGE atomic mass is approximately 15.9994
The molecular formula of sulphur trioxide is SO3. What is the mass of oxygen present in 20 g of sulphur trioxide? (Relative atomic mass: S = 32; O = 16) need help
The formula of ammonium sulphate is (NH4)2SO4, showing that each formula mass contains one sulphur atom. The formula mass of ammonium sulphate is 132.13, and the gram atomic mass of sulphur is 32.06. Therefore, the percent by mass of sulphur in ammonium sulphate is 100(32.06/132.13) or 24.26, to the justified number of significant digits.
16 amu
The atomic weight (not mass) of hydrogen is: [1,00784; 1,00811]; the conventional value is 1,008. The atomic weight (not mass) of oxygen is: [15,99903; 15,99977]; the conventional value is 15,999.