Want this question answered?
Well all Isotopes have the same atomic number so if you have the element the atomic number of an element with that same isotope is that same atomic number.
Curium has 96 protons. Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of an isotope - atomic number of the isotope The atomic number of curium is 96; for the isotopic masses of curium read at the link below.
Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of an isotope - Atomic number of the element The atomic number of hassium is 108; each isotope of an element has a different number of neutrons and a different atomic mass.
Curium is an artificial chemical element. Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of an isotope - atomic number of the isotope The atomic number of curium is 96; and atomic mass is 247 so no of neutrons is 151.
Number of Neutrons = Atomic mass minus Atomic Number. Neutrons = 18[Atomic Mass] - 8[Atomic Number] Neutrons = 10
Subtract the atomic number of the isotope from its atomic mass number to obtain the number of neutrons in an isotope.
Atomic Mass (of an isotope) - number of protons (of an isotope) = number of neutrons (of an isotope)
Well all Isotopes have the same atomic number so if you have the element the atomic number of an element with that same isotope is that same atomic number.
153 neutrons in the most stable isotope Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of an isotope - atomic number. Atomic mass of the most stable isotope of Cf is 251. Atomic number of Cf is 98.
There is no such isotope. The highest atomic number is 118. The question is erroneous. The isotope platinum-190 has the atomic number 78, the mass number 190 and the atomic mass 189,959 932(6).
The atomic number (not isotope number) of fermium is 100.
Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of an isotope - atomic number Atomic number of Cf is 98.
The atomic number of an isotope is always identical to every other isotope, otherwise, it would form a separate element.
Each isotope of an element has a different number of neutrons: Atomic mass of the isotope - Atomic number = Number of neutrons
Atomic number is not related to isotopes.
Curium has 96 protons. Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of an isotope - atomic number of the isotope The atomic number of curium is 96; for the isotopic masses of curium read at the link below.
An isotope's mass number is the sum of the protons and neutrons in each atomic nucleus of the isotope.