The number of protons is equal to the number of electrons.
In that atom , no. of protons and no. of electrons are equal.
An uncharged atom has equal numbers of protons and electrons.
Most atoms in their ground state have a neutral charge. An atom with a non-neutral charge is an ion. There isn't a specific word for an atom that is neutral.
The number of electrons equals the number of protons.
The number of protons (each with a +1 (positive) charge) in the nucleus must equal the number of electrons (each with a -1 (negative) charge) found around the nucleus.
The neutral atom hasn't a charge.
A neutral atom differs in charge from a positive or negative ion.
No, atoms are neutral
There is no net electrical charge on an "unreacted" atom.
The charge of an atom who captured a single elektron is - or -1
A neutral atom will have a charge of ZERO
It is because there is an equal amount of positive and negative charge to produce a neutral charge. Just the presence of neutrons does not make the atom neutral. An atom will lose its neutral charge if it loses or gains electrons and becomes an ion
neutral
yes this is true
The neutral atom hasn't a charge.
No. The negatively charged particles of an atom are called electrons. Neutrons have a neutral charge.
The atom is neutral. There is no charge.
A neutral atom hasn't an electrical charge.
An atom that has an equal number of protons and electrons will be neutral and have no charge.
A neutral atom differs in charge from a positive or negative ion.
neutral
No, atoms are neutral