monoisotopic
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Monoisotopic — mass is a term from mass spectrometry, and usually refers to the atomic weight of a molecule calculated using (for each element) the atomic weight of the most naturally abundant isotope of that element. Monoisotopic element is one of the 26… … Wikipedia
Monoisotopic mass — This article is about the mass spectrometry term. For a list of monoisotopic elements, see stable isotope. The monoisotopic mass is the sum of the masses of the atoms in a molecule using the unbound, ground state, rest mass of the principal (most … Wikipedia
Monoisotopic element — Not to be confused with the 22 mononuclidic elements, defined as those with only one significant naturally abundant nuclide. A monoisotopic element is one of 26 chemical elements which have only a single stable isotope (nuclide). A list is given… … Wikipedia
monoisotopic element — vienizotopis elementas statusas T sritis fizika atitikmenys: angl. monoisotopic element vok. monoisotopisches Element, n rus. одноизотопный элемент, m pranc. élément monoisotopique, m … Fizikos terminų žodynas
monoisotopic — mono·isotopic … English syllables
monoisotopic — “+ adjective Etymology: mon + isotopic : consisting of a single isotope used of an element … Useful english dictionary
Mass (mass spectrometry) — This article is about different concepts of mass used in mass spectrometry. For other uses, see mass. The mass recorded by a mass spectrometer can refer to different physical quantities depending on the characteristics of the instrument and the… … Wikipedia
Mononuclidic element — Not to be confused with the 26 monoisotopic elements defined as having only one stable nuclide. Set A is the 26 monoisotopic elements and B the 22 mononuclidic elements. The intersection consists of 19 elements that are both, but each set… … Wikipedia
Molecular mass — This article is about the mass of a single molecule. For the mass of a substance commonly used in basic stoichiometric calculations, see Molar mass. Assuming hydrogen and oxygen are standard weights in this image (as opposed to deuterium oxide)… … Wikipedia
Stable isotope — Graph of isotopes/nuclides by type of decay. Orange and blue nuclides are unstable, with the black squares between these regions representing stable nuclides. The unbroken line passing below many of the nuclides represents the theoretical… … Wikipedia