The atomic mass (ma) is the mass of an atom, most often expressed in unified atomic mass units.[1] The atomic mass may be considered to be the total mass of protons, neutrons and electrons in a single atom (when the atom is motionless). The atomic mass is sometimes incorrectly used as a synonym of relative atomic mass, average atomic mass and atomic weight; however, these differ subtly from the atomic mass. The atomic mass is defined as the mass of an atom, which can only be one isotope at a time and is not an abundance-weighted average. In the case of many elements that have one dominant isotope the actual numerical similarity/difference between the atomic mass of the most common isotope and the relative atomic mass or standard atomic weights can be very small such that it does not affect most bulk calculations-- but such an error can be critical when considering individual atoms. For elements with more than one common isotope the difference even to the most common atomic mass can be half a mass unit or more (e.g. chlorine). The atomic mass of an uncommon isotope can same/differ from the relative atomic mass or standard atomic weight by several mass units.
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- what is chemistry?
- Branches Of Chemistry
- Molecular Formula
- Molecular mass
- Atomic mass
- Atomic number
- Discovery of the Neutron (1932)
- Discovery of Proton
- Discovery of Electron
- Radioactive decay
- Electron cloud
- Nucleus
- mass spectrometer
- Atom
- chain reaction
- Molecular Mass Calculations
- Formula Mass (Formula Weight)
- Formula Mass (Formula Weight)
- Molecular Mass (Molecular Weight)
- Molecules of Compounds
- Microscale Gas Chemistry Experiments with Oxygen
- Uses of Carbon dioxide
- History of human understanding
- Properties of carbon dioxide
- What is carbon dioxide and how is it discovered?
- Energy - Absorbed or Released
- Chemical Changes
- Chemical vs Physical Change
- Atoms Around Us
- The List of Elements
- The Same Everywhere
- Periodic Table and the Elements
- Changing States of Matter
- Matter is the Stuff Around You
- Chemical Reactions
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