All the isotopes of uranium contain 92 protons; the number of neutrons is variable for each isotope:
Number of neutrons = Atomic weight of the given isotope - 92
Uranium is the 92nd element on the periodic table. That means there are 92 protons in 1 uranium atom, no matter which isotope. Protons are constant through an element. Every single atom of Uranium has 92 protons. Neutrons, however change with isotopes. 241 is the number of protons and neutrons together. So subtract 92 from 241 to get the number of neutrons in uranium 241
The element is Uranium , the symbol is (U). The charge is +1 because:Atomic number(Z): # of protons (92), which also tells you what element it is in the periodic table.Ion charge: # of protons (92) - # of electrons (91) = 1Mass number(A): # of protons (92) + # of neutrons (143) =235
92 protons 92 electrons, 125 to 150 neutrons depending on the isotope (natural or artificial). For the natural isotopes of uranium: Uranium 238 has: 92 protons, 92 electrons and 146 neutrons. Uranium 235 has: 92 protons, 92 electrons and 143 neutrons. Uranium 234 has: 92 protons, 92 electrons and 142 neutrons.
Uranium being element 92, it has 92 protons. If not ionized it also has 92 electrons. U-241 has 241 protons and neutrons together, so it would have 149 neutrons.
For the natural isotopes of uranium: Uranium 238 has: 92 protons, 92 electrons and 146 neutrons. Uranium 235 has: 92 protons, 92 electrons and 143 neutrons. Uranium 234 has: 92 protons, 92 electrons and 142 neutrons.
No, Uranium-235 and uranium-238 are radioactive, natural isotopes (not molecules, but atoms) of the one and the same element: uranium.Both with 92 protons and 235-92 = 143 neutrons in U-235 but 146 neutrons in U-238.
92. All isotopes of Uranium have 92 protons. The number of protons in each element is represented by the atomic number of that element. Uranium is atomic # 92, so it will always have 92 protons. The difference in atomic mass (that's the 234 here) is due to difference in number of neutrons. Atomic mass is calculated (#of protons + # of neutrons), so Uranium-234 has 92 protons and 142 neutrons. Uranium-235 would have 92 protons and 143 neutrons and so forth. The number of protons contained in the nucleus of ANY atom will remain constant in ALL isotopes of the same element. Ex. Carbon-12 has 6 protons and 6 neutrons, Carbon-13 has 6 protons and 7 neutrons, etc. Carbon has an atomic number of 6. If the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom were different, it would no longer be the same element. Ex. Carbon - atomic #6 - has 6 protons with one more proton in the nucleus, it would have 7, and have atomic # 7.... then it would just be...... Nitrogen! Nitrogen - atomic #7 - has 7 protons
Protons = 92 Electrons = 92 Neutrons = 146 The number of electrons and protons in a neutral atom are each equal to the atomic number of the element (92). The number of neutrons equals the atomic weight minus the number of protons (238 - 92 = 146).Uranium has 92 protons, 92 electrons, and usually 147 neutrons, though another isotope has 143 neutrons.
how many particles are found in the nucleus of a uranium atom? 92 protons and x neutrons; the number of the neutrons is dependent of the isotope atomic mass. Also 92 electrons.
Protons, neutrons and electrons - as in all the other chemical elements.
Uranium isotopes have 92 protons and electrons; the number of neutrons is different for each isotope.Number of neutrons = Mass number - Number of protons
Uranium 234 has: 92 protons, 92 electrons and 142 neutrons.