No, a neutron star is not 100% neutrons. The outer portion of a neutron star may consist of a crust of iron nuclei and electrons.
The notation "n-100" refers to a neutron with a mass number of 100. Since neutrons do not have a defined atomic number, we can infer that the mass number (100) represents the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom. However, as "n" indicates a neutron and has no protons, "n-100" would simply have 100 neutrons.
It would not exist. A neutron star is what it is by virtue of the mass of the whole star. Extracting just a pinhead would revert that matter back to normal matter. For the sake of density - as weight has nothing to do with matter outside of a gravitational body. The denisty of a pinhead of neutron star would be the equivalant of about 100 times the mass of the Great Pyramid of Giza
The neutron star's density varies from below 1×109 kg/m3 in the crust increasing with depth to above 6×1017 or 8×1017 kg/m3 deeper insideThis density is approximately equivalent to the mass of the entire human population compressed into the size of a sugar cube.
Two cubic meters of neutron star would have a mass of about 10^18 (1 quintillion) kilograms or about 1 quadrillion metric tons.
Fermium has 100 protons and electrons. Number of neutrons = Atomic mass of an isotope - Atomic number of the element The atomic number of fermium is 100; but fermium has 17 isotopes, each with a different number of neutrons. For the most stable isotope of fermium, 257Fm: protons-100 electrons-100 neutrons-157 atomic mass per unit (AMU)-257
The notation "n-100" refers to a neutron with a mass number of 100. Since neutrons do not have a defined atomic number, we can infer that the mass number (100) represents the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom. However, as "n" indicates a neutron and has no protons, "n-100" would simply have 100 neutrons.
Nitrogen is made up of seven protons and seven electrons (I'm not 100% sure about the electrons part), and the number of neutrons varies depending on the isotope. (N21 has 14 neutrons, N8 has one neutron)
It would not exist. A neutron star is what it is by virtue of the mass of the whole star. Extracting just a pinhead would revert that matter back to normal matter. For the sake of density - as weight has nothing to do with matter outside of a gravitational body. The denisty of a pinhead of neutron star would be the equivalant of about 100 times the mass of the Great Pyramid of Giza
The neutron star's density varies from below 1×109 kg/m3 in the crust increasing with depth to above 6×1017 or 8×1017 kg/m3 deeper insideThis density is approximately equivalent to the mass of the entire human population compressed into the size of a sugar cube.
100+100+100=300. 300/3 is 100
47 percent out of 100 percent is 47 percent (0.47 x 100 percent = 47 percent). More clearly, 47 % / 100 % = 47 / 100 = 0.47
3 percent out of 100 percent = 0.03 x 100 percent = 3 percent
100 percent sure it will be star wars the force unleashed 2
0.5845842 or 58.45842%
12% of 60% as a percent = 100*12/100*60/100 = 7.2%12% of 60% as a percent = 100*12/100*60/100 = 7.2%12% of 60% as a percent = 100*12/100*60/100 = 7.2%12% of 60% as a percent = 100*12/100*60/100 = 7.2%
Over time a pulsar's spin period slows down sufficiently for the "pulse" to turn off (the "death line"). This occurs after about 10-100 million years, which means of all the neutron stars in the universe, around 99% no longer pulsate.
You head over to their help page and ask for technical assistence.