QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- why do we only use the neutrons and protons to find the atomic mass of an atom?
- write an a.c.e. response confirming or denying the following claim: aluminum has 14 neutrons in its nucleus.
Brief Explanations
For Question 3:
Electrons have an extremely small mass (approximately $9.109 \times 10^{-31}$ kg) compared to protons ($1.673 \times 10^{-27}$ kg) and neutrons ($1.675 \times 10^{-27}$ kg). This mass is negligible when calculating the total atomic mass, so only protons and neutrons are considered.
For Question 4 (A.C.E. Response):
- Assertion: The claim that aluminum has 14 neutrons in its nucleus is correct.
- Evidence: Aluminum has an atomic number (number of protons) of 13, and its standard atomic mass is approximately 27 amu. The formula for neutrons is $\text{Number of neutrons} = \text{Atomic mass} - \text{Atomic number}$.
- Explanation: Substituting values gives $27 - 13 = 14$, so a neutral aluminum atom has 14 neutrons in its nucleus.
Calculating $27 - 13 = 14$, confirming 14 neutrons in aluminum's nucleus.
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- Electrons have negligible mass relative to protons and neutrons, so they do not contribute meaningfully to the total atomic mass, only protons and neutrons are used for the calculation.
- Assertion: The claim that aluminum has 14 neutrons is correct.
Evidence: Aluminum has atomic number 13, atomic mass ≈27 amu; neutron count = atomic mass - atomic number.