atomic mass jerm-e atomi (#) Fr.: masse atomique The mass of a single atom, when the atom is at rest at its lowest energy level (→ ground state). Because a → chemical element may exist as various → isotopes, possessing different numbers of neutrons in their atomic nuclei, atomic mass is calculated for each isotope separately. Atomic mass is most often expressed in unified → atomic mass units, where one unified atomic mass unit is defined as one-twelfth the mass of a single atom of the carbon-12 isotope. |
atomic mass number (A-number) adad-e jerm-e atomi (#) Fr.: nombre de masse atomique The total number of → protons and → neutrons in the → nucleus of an → atom (symbol A). For example, Oxygen-16 has a mass number of sixteen, because it has eight protons and eight neutrons. |
atomic mass unit (amu) yekâ-ye jerm-e atomi (#) Fr.: unité de masse atomique A unit of mass used for atoms and molecules, equal to 1/12 of the mass of an atom of carbon-12 (including orbital electrons). It is equal to 1.660 33 × 10-24 g. |
relative atomic mass jerm-e atomi-ye bâzâni Fr.: masse atomique relative The ratio of the mass of an atom of the → chemical element to one-twelfth the mass of an atom of carbon-12. Because an element in nature is usually a mixture of isotopes, the relative atomic mass is also the weighted mean of the atomic masses of all the atoms in a particular sample of the element, weighted by isotopic abundance. In this sense, relative atomic mass was once known as → atomic weight. |