Talk:Nucleon number

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Revision as of 01:12, 19 January 2005 by Kkmurray (talk | contribs)

--Ionworker 11:58, 6 Jan 2005 (CST)

I think a dimensionless quantity should not be called a mass. Therefore mass number should be discontinued. Also, nucleon number is more precisely describing what is meant.


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DRAFT DEFINITION
Nucleon number
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This is an unofficial draft definition presented for information and comment.

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Comments

There used to be another name for the same property: the Mass number. This name, however, is misleading because a unitless quantity should not be called "mass". The symbol for the quantity nucleon number used to be m, which is even more unfortunate because m is the official symbol of a mass quantity.

The nominal mass M has a simillar meaning as the nuclear number, but it is not dimensionless. It is a mass measured in the Atomic Mass Unit, also called Dalton.

M = z Da

where z is an integer value.