How can an atomic mass not be a whole number?

1 Answer
Nov 27, 2016

It's an average of all isotopes.

Explanation:

There are different isotopes of every element and the atomic mass is an average mass of all those isotopes.

E.g. Iron has for naturally occurring isotopes with masses: 53.940 mu, 55.935 mu, 56.935 mu, and 57.933 mu. If you get their abundances and multiply the corresponding mass to their abundance, you get the average atomic mass, which is 55.846 mu.

Hope this helps :)