Mass number: 14 Atomic/proton number: 7 If you look at the periodic table, the mass number is the top and the atomic number is the bottom number.
The atomic number of nitrogen is 7. When it is a radioactive isotope you add the number of neutrons to the atomic number (equaling 15). You then write 15 over 7 next to a capital 'N' representing Nitrogen.
14 (mass number) - 7 (number of protons) = 7 (number of neutrons)
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 most stable isotope of radium - 226Ra - has the atomic mass 226,025 409 8 (25).
Nickel has 28 electrons and protons; the number of neutrons is specific for each isotope. Number of neutrons in a nickel isotope = Mass number -28
You would need to know how many protons and neutrons are in the nucleus of a particular isotope of nitrogen. The number of protons, which is its atomic number, will always be the same, no matter which isotope is given, but the number of neutrons differs with different isotopes. For example, one isotope of nitrogen has 7 neutrons. To determine its mass number, find nitrogen on the periodic table, and you will see that its atomic number is 7. So this isotope of nitrogen has 7 protons. Now, add the 7 neutrons to the 7 protons, and you get a mass number of 14 for this isotope of nitrogen, which is called nitrogen-14. (Isotopes are named by their mass numbers.) Another isotope of nitrogen has 8 neutrons. Add the 8 neutrons to the 7 protons (atomic number), and you get a mass number of 15 for this isotope of nitrogen, called nitrogen-15.
Atom number 7 is Nitrogen, 157N , isotope 15 with mass number 15 The answer is N(15) isotope
You are talking about a natural isotope of nitrogen i.e Nitrogen-15 which has atomic number same as nitrogen (7) ans mass number 1 greater than standard nitrogen (i.e 15 as Nitrogen's mass no. is 14). Nitrogen-15 has i neutron more than standard nitrogen
Mass number: 14 Atomic/proton number: 7 If you look at the periodic table, the mass number is the top and the atomic number is the bottom number.
Be, B, C, N, O and F have an isotope with the mass 15. Example for nitrogen: 157N (15 is the atomic mass of the isotope, 7 is the atomic number of nitrogen). For other elements, of course, the atomic number is different.
Nitrogen is a non metal element. Mass number of it is 14.
Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of an isotope - Atomic number of the element For the most important natural stable isotope of nitrogen - 14N - the number of neutrons is 7.
The mass number of a nitrogen atom is determined by the mass of the nucleus. As it is the relative mass, it is equal to the combined number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of the atom. For example, the most common isotope of nitrogen contains seven protons and seven neutrons, giving it a mass number of 14. Some atoms of nitrogen have an extra neutron, which gives a mass number of 15.
The atomic number of nitrogen is 7. When it is a radioactive isotope you add the number of neutrons to the atomic number (equaling 15). You then write 15 over 7 next to a capital 'N' representing Nitrogen.
The mass number of the isotope 228Ra is 228.
Subtract the number of protons (atomic number) from the mass number 16. The atomic number of nitrogen is 7, therefore its atoms have 7 protons. The number of neutrons in the atoms of the isotope nitrogen-16 is 16 -7 = 9 neutrons.