Hi There!
<span>How do the mass number and charge of a nucleus change when it emits a gamma ray?
</span><span>The charge doesn't change as a result of emitting a photon (which is what a gamma ray is). The mass does change by a small amount (due to the energy-mass equivalence relationship; a photon has no rest mass, but does have energy), but not by enough to make any real difference in the mass number.</span><span>
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Answer:
arsenic
Explanation:helium is a gas and aluminum is a etal and carbon is not a maetalloid
Answer:
Amount of HCL = 0.00318 L of 3.18 ml
Explanation:
Given:
HCL = 2.5 M
NaOH = 0.53 M
Amount of NaOH = 15 ml = 0.015 L
Find:
Amount of HCL
Computation:
HCL react with NaOH
HCl + NaOH ⇒ NaCl + H₂O
So,
Number of moles = Molarity × volume
Number of moles of NaOH = 0.53 × 0.015
Number of moles of NaOH = 0.00795 moles
So,
Number of moles of HCl needed = 0.00795 mol
es
So,
Volume = No. of moles / Molarity
Amount of HCL = 0.00795 / 2.5
Amount of HCL = 0.00318 L of 3.18 ml
Answer: Your answer would be D. A neutral atom would become positively charged when they lose electrons because electrons are negatively charged. Removing some of these negative charges causes the atom to become more positively charged. Hope this has helped you :D