Chapter 4

Chemistry Matter and Change · 91 exercises

Problem 66

How many protons and electrons are contained in an atom of element 44 ?

3 step solution

Problem 67

Carbon A carbon atom has a mass number of 12 and an atomic number of \(6 .\) How many neutrons does it have?

4 step solution

Problem 68

Mercury An isotope of mercury has 80 protons and 120 neutrons. What is the mass number of this isotope?

4 step solution

Problem 70

If an atom has 18 electrons, how many protons does it have?

3 step solution

Problem 73

How many electrons, protons, and neutrons are contained in each atom? \begin{equation} \begin{array}{ll}{\text { a. }_{55}^{132} \mathrm{Cs}} & {\text { c. }_{69}^{163} \mathrm{Tm}} \\ {\text { b. }_{27}^{59} \mathrm{Co}} & {\text { d. }_{30}^{70} \mathrm{Zn}}\end{array} \end{equation}

5 step solution

Problem 75

For each chemical symbol, determine the number of protons and electrons an atom of the element contains. \begin{equation} \begin{array}{ll}{\text { a. } V} & {\text { c. Ir }} \\ {\text { b. Mn }} & {\text { d. } S}\end{array} \end{equation}

5 step solution

Problem 76

Gallium, which has an atomic mass of 69.723 amu, has two naturally occurring isotopes, Ga- 69 and Ga- \(71 .\) Which isotope occurs in greater abundance? Explain.

4 step solution

Problem 77

Atomic Mass of Silver Silver has two isotopes: \(\stackrel{107}{47} \mathrm{Ag}\) which has a mass of 106.905 amu and a percent abundance of 52.00\(\%\), and 47 \(\stackrel{109}{47} \mathrm{Ag}\), which has a mass of 108.905 amu and an percent abundance of 48.00\(\%\) What is the atomic mass of silver?

5 step solution

Problem 79

What is radioactive decay?

4 step solution

Problem 81

Discuss how radioactive atoms gain stability

5 step solution

Problem 82

Define alpha particle, beta particle, and gamma ray

3 step solution

Problem 83

Write the symbols used to denote alpha, beta, and gamma radiation and give their mass and charge.

3 step solution

Problem 84

What type of reaction involves changes in the nucleus of an atom?

3 step solution

Problem 85

Radioactive Emissions What change in mass number occurs when a radioactive atom emits an alpha particle? A beta particle? A gamma particle?

3 step solution

Problem 87

Explain how energy loss and nuclear stability are related to radioactive decay

4 step solution

Problem 88

Explain what must occur before a radioactive atom stops to undergo further radioactive decay

4 step solution

Problem 89

Boron-10 emits alpha particles and cesium-137 emits beta particles. Write balanced nuclear reactions for each radioactive decay.

3 step solution

Problem 90

Determine what was wrong with Dalton's theory and provide the most recent version of the atomic structure.

4 step solution

Problem 91

Cathode-Ray Tube Describe a cathode-ray tube and how it operates.

6 step solution

Problem 92

Subatomic Particles Explain how J. J. Thomson's determination of the charge- to-mass ratio of the electron led to the conclusion that atoms were composed of subatomic particles.

5 step solution

Problem 94

If a nucleus contains 12 protons, how many electrons are in the neutral atom? Explain.

3 step solution

Problem 95

An atom's nucleus has 92 protons and its mass number is 235\. How many neutrons are in the nucleus? What is the name of the atom?

5 step solution

Problem 98

Is the charge of a nucleus positive, negative, or zero? The charge of an atom?

3 step solution

Problem 99

Why are electrons in a cathode-ray tube deflected by electric fields?

4 step solution

Problem 101

What is the mass number of potassium- 39\(?\) What is the isotope's charge?

4 step solution

Problem 102

Boron-10 and boron-11 are the naturally occurring isotopes of elemental boron. If boron has an atomic mass of 10.81 amu, which isotope occurs in greater abundance?

5 step solution

Problem 103

Semiconductors Silicon is important to the semiconductor manufacturing industry. The three naturally occuring isotopes of silicon are silicon-28, silicon-29, and silicon-30. Write the symbol for each.

6 step solution

Problem 106

Relative Abundances Magnesium constitutes about 2\(\%\) of Earth's crust and has three naturally occurring isotopes. Suppose you analyze a mineral and determine that it contains the three isotopes in the following proportions: Mg- 24 (abundance = \(79 \% ), \mathrm{Mg}-25\) (abundance \(=10 \% ),\) and \(\mathrm{Mg}-26\) (abundance = 11 \(\%\) ). If your friend analyzes a different mineral containing magnesium, do you expect her to obtain the same relative abundances for each magnesium isotope? Explain your reasoning.

4 step solution

Problem 109

Discuss What experiment led to the dispute of J. J. Thomson's plum pudding atomic model? Explain your answer.

5 step solution

Problem 110

Apply Which is greater, the number of compounds or the number of elements? The number of elements or the number of isotopes? Explain.

3 step solution

Problem 112

Apply If atoms are primarily composed of empty space, explain why you cannot pass your hand through a solid object.

4 step solution

Problem 114

Apply Indium has two naturally occurring isotopes and an atomic mass of 114.818 amu. In \(-113\) has a mass of 112.904 amu and an abundance of 4.3\(\%\) . What is the identity and percent abundance of indium's other isotope?

5 step solution

Problem 115

Infer Sulfur's average atomic mass is close to the whole number \(32 .\) Chlorine's average atomic mass is 35.453 , which is not a whole number. Suggest a possible reason for this difference.

4 step solution

Problem 116

Magnesium Isotopes Compute the mass number, \(X,\) of the third isotope of magnesium given that the respective abundances of the naturally occurring isotopes are: \(79.0 \%, 10 \%,\) and 11\(\%\) for \(_{12}^{24} \mathrm{Mg}_{12}^{25} \mathrm{Mg}_{12}^{X} \mathrm{Mg}.\) The relative atomic mass of magnesium is 24.305 amu.

4 step solution

Problem 117

How is a qualitative observation different from a quantitative observation? Give an example of each. (Chapter 1\()\)

4 step solution

Problem 120

Classify each mixture as heterogeneous or homogeneous. (Chapter 3) \begin{equation} \begin{array}{l}{\text { a. salt water }} \\ {\text { b. vegetable soup }} \\\ {\text { c. } 14-\mathrm{K} \text { gold }} \\ {\text { d. concrete }}\end{array} \end{equation}

5 step solution

Problem 121

Determine whether each change is physical or chemical. (Chapter 3\()\) \begin{equation} \begin{array}{l}{\text { a. Water boils. }} \\ {\text { b. A match burns. }} \\\ {\text { c. Sugar dissolves in water. }} \\ {\text { d. Sodium reacts with water. }} \\ {\text { e. Ice cream melts. }}\end{array} \end{equation}

7 step solution

Problem 122

Television and Computer Screens Describe how cathode rays are used to generate television and computer monitor images.

4 step solution

Problem 123

The Standard Model The standard model of particle physics describes all of the known building blocks of matter. Research the particles included in the standard model. Write a short report describing the known particles and those thought to exist but not yet detected experimentally.

4 step solution

Problem 124

STM Individual atoms can be seen using a sophisti- cated device known as a scanning tunneling micro- scope. Write a short report on how the scanning tunneling microscope works and create a gallery of this microscope's images from sources such as books, magazines, and the Internet.

6 step solution

Problem 127

Does the number of protons or neutrons remain the same for all isotopes? Explain.

4 step solution

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