yes
Neutrons have no electric charge and have nearly 1,840 times the mass of the electron. Free neutrons undergo beta decay with a half-life of about 10 minutes. Thus, they are not readily found in nature, except in cosmic rays. They are a penetrating form of radiation. When bombarded with neutrons, various elements undergo nuclear fission and release more free neutrons. If enough free neutrons are produced, a chain reaction can be sustained.
Free neutrons.
This question doesn't make sense. There are hydrogen, helium, lithium, beryllium, boron, and carbon atoms that have 2 neutrons. There are also free neutrons and free dineutrons. Your answer can be 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6.
Our sun gets energy from fusing hydrogen atoms with neutrons to form helium atoms.
Usually in the nucleus, but they can also exist free.
The protons and neutrons R in the nucleus while electrons R rotating around like the planets around the sun
The primary subatomic particles found in the sun are protons, neutrons, and electrons. Protons and neutrons make up the sun's core, where nuclear fusion reactions occur, releasing energy in the form of light and heat. Electrons are present in the surrounding layers of the sun as part of its plasma.
why could you consider the sun ''free enegery''
Nucleus.
No. The atom has neutrons and protons in the nucleus while the electrons are found in a "cloud" around the nucleus. That means that have no real fixed location like the planets do around the sun.
Neutrons are not considered nomadic; they are subatomic particles found within atomic nuclei alongside protons. They are stable when bound within nuclei but become unstable and can decay into other particles if free (not bound to a nucleus). In free space, neutrons have a half-life of about 14 minutes before they decay, making them transient rather than nomadic.
It is similar to a solar system. The sun is the nucleus with protons and neutrons and the electrons are the planets.