No. It's a single proton.
To answer your question: no, hydrogen atoms (the isotope hydrogen-1, protium) consist of a single proton and a single electron.Although they can consist of one proton, one electron and up to six neutrons.
no, ordinary hydrogen has only one proton.
1 Proton only
No electrons are in the nucleus. the nucleus consists of a proton for normal hydrogen, a proton and neutron for deuterium and a proton and two neutrons for tritium. Deuterium and tritium are isotopes of hydrogen.
The nucleus of a hydrogen atom is formed by a single proton.
paramecium
It is unclear exactly how a single neutron could be removed from a Uranium-236 nucleus to create a Uranium-235 nucleus. (It would probably prove quite difficult to do.) As to the energy required to do this, about all we can do is look at the binding energy of this nucleus. It turns out that the binding energy per nucleon in the U236 nucleus is about 7.6 MeV (million electron volts). This suggests that it would take a minimum of about 7.6 MeV to pluck that neutron from the U236 nucleus to create the U235 nucleus.
It is the neutron and proton that make up the nucleus of an atom. The only exception is Hydrogen (isotope mass number 1), having only one (single) proton in its nucleus and no neutrons. All other atoms have a nucleus that is made up of combinations of these two subatomic particles.
As all atoms do, arsenic has one nucleus. That nucleus consists of 33 protons and 42 neutrons.
The basic difference is a neutron. Most hydrogen has a single proton for a nucleus. Hydrogen-2 has a neutron stuck to the proton, and hydrogen-3 has two neutrons stuck to the proton. Hydrogen-3 is a rare and highly unstable form of the first element.
An amoeba is a type of single-celled organism belonging to the phylum Amoebozoa. It is classified as a protist, specifically a unicellular eukaryote.
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.