No, because the mass of hydrogen is only one.
An atom with a nucleus that has no neutrons is hydrogen-1, which consists of one proton and no neutrons. It is the simplest and lightest element on the periodic table.
Hydrogen has no neutrons. It has 1 proton in the nucleus and 1 orbital electron.
In a Hydrogen nucleus there is a proton. Hydrogen is the only element to not have a neutron in it's nucleus.
Every nucleus (except for Hydrogen) consists of protons and neutrons. The hydrogen nucleus is only a proton.
The most common isotope of Hydrogen lacks a neutron in its nucleus. But there is an isotope, called deuterium, that has one neutron. Additionally, there is a hydrogen isotope that is artificially created that has two neutrons in its nucleus. It is called tritium. A link to the Wikipedia article on the isotopes of hydrogen is provided.
Atoms are made from three basic particles: protons, neutrons and electronsNeutron and protons make up nucleus. Electrons revolve around the nucleus
hydrogen
Hydrogen
Each isotope of hydrogen has 1 proton in the nucleus. The difference between the isotopes lies in the number of neutrons: hydrogen-1 has 0 neutrons, hydrogen-2 (deuterium) has 1 neutron, and hydrogen-3 (tritium) has 2 neutrons.
An atom contains protons and neutrons in the nucleus (though Hydrogen does not have neutrons) and electrons orbiting the nucleus.
The hydrogen nucleus has a single proton. The helium nucleus has two protons and one or two neutrons.
Hydrogen has three naturally occurring isotopes:Protium or 1H has only a single proton in its nucleus (no neutrons) and is by far the most common isotope (~99.9885% of all hydrogen atoms are protium)Deuterium or 2H has one proton and one neutron in its nucleus and is the second most common isotope (~0.0115% of all hydrogen atoms are deuterium)Tritium or 3H contains one proton and two neutrons in its nucleus and occurs in very small trace amounts in nature (less than 0.00001%)4H with 3 neutrons, 5H with 4 neutrons, 6H with 5 neutrons and 7H with 6 neutrons have been produced artificially in the lab but they all have half-life of less than 10-21 seconds.