there are 16 nuetrons in phosphorus atom
it however has 15 protons , 15 electrons , and 16 nuetrons
The main difference between the three isotopes of Hydrogen are the number of neutrons in the nucleus. Hydrogen has no neutrons, Deuterium has one neutron and Tritium has two neutrons. All three have one proton and one electrons.
it has 35 nuetrons, 30 protons, and 30 electrons with a mass of 65
Hydrogen. 2 hydrogens to be exact
hydrogen
Yes. There are three isotopes in the Hydrogen family; Hydrogen (no neutrons); Deuterium (one neutron) & Tritium (two neutrons). Tritium is radioactive. It emits beta radiation (electron).
Hydrogen only has one proton. A Hydrogen-3 atom contains one proton and 2 nuetrons. This is because atoms of a certain element can vary in the amount of nuetrons. The're called isotopes.
One Proton One electron zero neutrons
Yes they all have except Hydrogen. H has only one proton in its nucleus.
Hydrogen contains 1 proton and usually no neutrons. Though this depends on the isotope. A small percentage of hydrogen contains 1 proton and 1 neutron and an even smaller amount has 1 proton and 2 neutrons. This last variety is radioactive.
The most abundent isotope of Hydrogen has only a proton for a nucleus with a single electron orbiting it. However some isotopes of Hydrogen do have neutrons in the nucleus.
Hydrogen atom: Atomic number: 1 Number of neutrons: 0 [for commonest isotope] Number of electrons: 1
2 of each
2 protons, 2 electrons and 2 neutrons
since there are 22 protons there has to be 22 nuetrons since there are 22 protons there has to be 22 nuetrons
Deuterium is an isotope of hydrogen. It has one proton and one neutron in its nucleus, compared to regular hydrogen which has only one proton. Deuterium is slightly heavier than regular hydrogen and is often used in laboratory experiments and as a tracer in scientific studies.