The whole number, the one at the top, above the element's symbol in the element box, is the atomic number. The atomic number is the number of protons per atom in that particular element. The bottom number, that is always a decimal, is the Atomic Mass.
The mass number is the combined number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of the particular element you are looking at. NOTE: (don't be confused by the periodic table) Different elements have isotopes with varying mass numbers, so the mass number displayed on a periodic table is the ratio of those isotopic mass numbers in any given sample of the element your examining. This ratio is often confused with with the mass number of the element when it is displayed on periodic tables, it is actually the relative atomic mass. You can tell if a number is the mass number or a relative atomic mass by whether or not it is a whole number if it is then it's a mass number if it has decimal places out beside it then you're looking at relative atomic mass.
Synecdoche is a figure of speech in which a part represents the whole or vice versa. Common examples include using "sails" to refer to a whole ship, or "the crown" to represent a monarchy. Another instance is saying "all hands on deck," where "hands" refers to the crew members. Lastly, referring to a car as "wheels" highlights just a part of the vehicle to represent the entire object.
When looking at a periodic table, atomic radius increases from top to bottom, and decreases from left to right. The bottom left corner is the largest, while the top right corner is the smallest radius.
usually whole grain but you do get different types of rice
The data is held on the hard drive in a computer system. The data is changed into single numbers and then recorded by the hardware on the computer before storage.
Because the masses of protons, neutrons and electrons are not whole numbers.
Why are atomic masses of elements not generally whole numbers? The atomic masses listed on the periodic table are a weighted AVERAGE of an element'sisotopes. ... An element's atomic number is the number of protons in its nucleus. Number of protons specifies atom type.
Elements also possess isotopes. So their average atomic mass is rarely whole number.
There are two numbers that are included in every element's block on every periodic table. The whole number, which can range from 1 - 118 is the atomic number of that element. The atomic number is the number of protons in the nuclei of the atoms of that element. The second number is the atomic weight and is never a whole number, except for the artificially prepared elements, and then it is a whole number written inside parentheses.There may be other numbers listed as well, depending on the periodic table. All periodic tables have a key as to what everything inside each block represents.
do you mean the why is the average atomic mass not a whole number? because if that is your question, then the answer is that each element has multipal isotopes and the mass you see on the periodic table is the average of all the isotopes together. So there has to be a decimal on the periodic table of elements
Yes it is.
Actually group 1 is ALL elements and so is the whole periodic table.
1. First cause: the atomic weight is the sum of the weights of protons, neutrons ans electrons.; they don't have masses as integers. 2. Second cause: also occurs the so-called mass defect. Note: no atomic masses for elements but atomic weights is correct.
The atomic number is the whole # on the periodic table or the # of protons in an atom. The atomic mass is the # that is not the whole # on the periodic table, or you can multiply the mass of the isotope by its abundance and add the answers together.
the wat to represent quanites that we cant represent with whole numbers.
The atomic number is derived from how many protons are present in the nucleus of an atom. Becaue you cannot have a fraction of a proton present in an atom, atomic numbers must be non negative integers.
They can represent quantities which are not just whole numbers.