subtract the number of protons from the number of electrons.
The above answer does not answer the question!!
Finding an electron of one isotope is no different to finding an electron of another isotope.
All of them.
an isotope
This is a chemical element. You can find the how many electron in a single atom by using a periodic table.
This is the isotope erbium-167.
The atomic particles of an isotope are the proton, electron and neutron
All of them.
The most common isotope of hydrogen has one proton, and one electron.The most common isotope of hydrogen has one proton, and one electron.The most common isotope of hydrogen has one proton, and one electron.The most common isotope of hydrogen has one proton, and one electron.
an isotope
This is a chemical element. You can find the how many electron in a single atom by using a periodic table.
Yes. One proton, one electron, no neutrons.
If the isotope loses the electron from its nucleus it is called beta decay. However it did not really lose the electron, as the electron never existed in the nucleus prior to the beta decay event happening. Beta decay that generates an electron happens when a neutron decays into a proton, an electron, and a neutrino: the proton usually remains in the nucleus, while the electron and neutrino (which is nearly impossible to detect, but it is always generated) are ejected from the nucleus at high velocity.If the isotope loses the electron from its electron shells it is not any type of decay, it is simple ionization of the atom.
This is atom of the isotope hydrogen-1 (protium).
its called an isotope c:
yes because only the number of neutrons differ.
This is the isotope erbium-167.
The atomic particles of an isotope are the proton, electron and neutron
No neutrons; H-1 has only one proton and one electron.