What you would do is on the Periodic Table find the element you are looking for, and than once you find it look on the bottom of its square to see the atomic number. Since atomic numbers can be very long you round it to the nearest whole number. Then you subtract that from the number in the top corner of the square to find the amount of protons in it.
Use a periodic table.
The Atomic number is the number of protons in a nucleus.
If you need te neutrons, minus te proton number from the atomic weight. Make sure you do not use an average weight of isotopes, however. (86.4535 sort of thing)
If there is a calculation, I will research it now.. :)
There are many different types of elements, all varying in the number of protons they contain. To determine the number of protons in a specific element, refer to the periodic table of elements. The atomic number (generally listed above the element's symbol, sometimes represented as 'Z') is equal to the number of protons in that atom.
The number of protons in the nucleus identifies the element. It is like a fingerprint for that element. No other element will have that same number of protons. As soon as the number of protons in the nucleus changes, so does the identity of the element change.
The number of protons in an atom of an element is equal to the number of electrons in that atom which is equal to that element's atomic number.
The number of protons in the nucleus of an element gives that element its ATOMIC NUMBER.
The protons of an element determine the atomic number, also known as the proton number. Do not confuse this with mass number which is the number of protons and neutrons.
The atomic number of any element is the number of protons in the nucleus of that element, which you can easily find in the periodic table of elements. You don't have to compute anything.
Each chemical element has a specific number of protons; the number of protons is equal to atomic number of the element.
The identity of an element is determined by the number of protons in the nuclei of its atoms. This is the atomic number of an element.
Experimentally, I'm not sure, but I know you can look at your periodic chart, the large number over the symbol of each element is teh number of protons in that element.
There are many different types of elements, all varying in the number of protons they contain. To determine the number of protons in a specific element, refer to the periodic table of elements. The atomic number (generally listed above the element's symbol, sometimes represented as 'Z') is equal to the number of protons in that atom.
By definition, the number of protons in the atoms of an element is the atomic number of the element.
Each element has a unique number of protons. If another atom has the same number of protons as that element, it is the same element.
The number of protons in the nucleus identifies the element. It is like a fingerprint for that element. No other element will have that same number of protons. As soon as the number of protons in the nucleus changes, so does the identity of the element change.
The number of protons in an atom of an element is equal to the number of electrons in that atom which is equal to that element's atomic number.
The number of protons in the nucleus of an element gives that element its ATOMIC NUMBER.
The protons of an element determine the atomic number, also known as the proton number. Do not confuse this with mass number which is the number of protons and neutrons.
The atomic number is the number of protons the element possesses.