beryllium-9
0 sources
beryllium-9
Summary
beryllium-9 is a stable isotope[1]. beryllium-9 draws 11 Wikipedia views per month (stable_isotope category, ranking #13 of 46).[2]
Key Facts
- beryllium-9's image is recorded as Beryllium-9.svg[3].
- beryllium-9's instance of is recorded as stable isotope[4].
- beryllium-9's instance of is recorded as isotope of beryllium[5].
- beryllium-9's GND ID is recorded as 4144846-7[6].
- beryllium-9's subclass of is recorded as beryllium[7].
- beryllium-9's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03qph72[8].
- beryllium-9's atomic number is recorded as {'amount': '+4'}[9].
- beryllium-9's spin quantum number is recorded as {'amount': '+1.5'}[10].
- beryllium-9's parity quantum number is recorded as {'amount': '-1'}[11].
- beryllium-9's neutron number is recorded as {'amount': '+5'}[12].
- beryllium-9's mass is recorded as {'unit': 'Q483261', 'amount': '+9.012183066'}[13].
- beryllium-9's binding energy is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28719934', 'amount': '+58164.012'}[14].
- beryllium-9's mass excess is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28719934', 'amount': '+11348.453'}[15].
- beryllium-9's natural abundance is recorded as {'amount': '+1.0'}[16].
- beryllium-9's Wolfram Language entity code is recorded as Entity["Isotope", "Beryllium9"][17].
Why It Matters
beryllium-9 draws 11 Wikipedia views per month (stable_isotope category, ranking #13 of 46).[2] beryllium-9 has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] beryllium-9 is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]