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An
atom consists of an extremely small, positively charged nucleus surrounded
by a cloud of negatively charged electrons. Although typically the nucleus
is less than one ten-thousandth the size of the atom, the nucleus contains
more that 99.9% of the mass of the atom! Nuclei consist of positively
charged protons and electrically neutral neutrons held together by the
so-called strong or nuclear force. This force is much stronger than the
familiar electrostatic force that binds the electrons to the nucleus,
but its range is limited to distances on the order of a few x10-15
meters.
The number of protons in the nucleus, Z,
is called the atomic number. This determines what chemical element the
atom is. The number of neutrons in the nucleus is denoted by N.
The atomic mass of the nucleus, A, is equal to Z + N.
A given element can have many different isotopes, which differ from one
another by the number of neutrons contained in the nuclei. In a neutral
atom, the number of electrons orbiting the nucleus equals the number of
protons in the nucleus. Since the electric charges of the proton and the
electron are +1 and-1 respectively (in units of the proton charge), the
net charge of the atom is zero. At present, there are 112 known elements
which range from the lightest, hydrogen, to the recently discovered and
yet to-be-named element 112. All of the elements heavier than uranium
are man made. Among the elements are approximately 270 stable isotopes,
and more than 2000 unstable isotopes.
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