monoisotopisk
Monoisotopisk is an adjective used in chemistry, biochemistry, and related fields to describe concepts or measurements tied to the monoisotopic mass of a molecule. The monoisotopic mass is the sum of the exact masses of the lightest stable isotopes of each element present in a substance (for example, 1H, 12C, 14N, 16O, and so on). This mass value provides a precise reference point for identifying and characterizing molecules in high‑resolution mass spectrometry.
Monoisotopic mass differs from the average or most abundant isotopic mass. The average mass weights isotopes
Calculation and use: the monoisotopic mass is obtained by summing the exact masses of the lightest stable
Limitations and considerations: natural isotope distributions mean that most molecules contain one or more heavier isotopes,