52Cr is a stable Chromium isotope. 52Cr is the most commun natural Chromium isotope.
There are three stable isotopes of Chromium 52Cr, 53Cr, and 54Cr.
I suppose it takes up a little more space and a little more ink if you have to write or print it, but that's pretty much all that "happens".If you're trying to ask what it means, it's a method of specifying a particular isotope (the number is the number of nucleons).
As of 2010, the Bose-Einstein condensate state of matter has only been achieved in temperatures of 10-7 K in many alkali and alkaline earth metals' isotopes. They include: 7Li, 23Na, 39K, 41K, 85Rb, 87Rb, 133Cs, 52Cr, 40Ca, 84Sr, 86Sr, 88Sr, and 174Yb
Chromium's, or Cr's, atomic number is 24. Therefore each chromium atom has 24 protons. 52Cr is the most stable isotope of chromium and has 52 - 24 = 28 neutrons. The chromium ion, Cr3+, means it has 3 less electrons than neutral chromium, and thus the number of protons and neutrons are unaffected.
24 of each
As of 2010, the Bose-Einstein condensate state of matter has only been achieved in temperatures of 10-7 K in many alkali and alkaline earth metals' isotopes. They include: 7Li, 23Na, 39K, 41K, 85Rb, 87Rb, 133Cs, 52Cr, 40Ca, 84Sr, 86Sr, 88Sr, and 174Yb
As of 2010, the Bose-Einstein condensate state of matter has only been achieved in temperatures of 10-7 K in many alkali and alkaline earth metals' isotopes. They include: 7Li, 23Na, 39K, 41K, 85Rb, 87Rb, 133Cs, 52Cr, 40Ca, 84Sr, 86Sr, 88Sr, and 174Yb
An isotope is a version of a chemical element that has the same number of protons, but a different number of neutrons. The number of protons (and corresponding electrons) is what gives an element its chemical properties; the number of neutrons changes the atom's weight and can give it additional properties such as radioactivity.In chromium's case, there are actually 28 different isotopes, ranging from 42Cr to 67Cr; but the four most stable ones are 50Cr, 52Cr, 53Cr and 54Cr. Since chromium contains 24 protons, those four isotopes contain 26, 28, 29 and 30 neutrons respectively.50Cr is especially interesting. It appears stable, but physicists believe, based on its properties, that it is actually radioactive; but with a half-life ten million times the lifetime of the universe so far! As a result of this extremely slow decay, nobody has ever observed an atom of chromium-50 splitting, so observation has yet to verify the math.