In normal matter, the only charged elementary particles are protons and electrons. An electrically neutral object will have exactly as many protons as electrons. A charged object will have slightly more of one than the other. But under normal conditions, the difference is extremely small compared to the total numbers.
In a neutral atom they are the same (e.g Flourine on its own has 9 protons, 9 electrons and 10 neutrons) but in a compund this will change.
Protons don't really relate to electricity. Electron do because electricity is the flow of electrons through a wire. Protons don't really relate to electricity except in some nuclear physics applications. Electrons do because electricity, by definition, is the flow of electrons through a wire. In its most fundamental form, electricity is the movement of charged particles. Protons qualify because they are charged particles. We don't usually cause protons to "flow" like we commonly do electrons, though we do use them frequently in particle accelerators. But protons are not generally thought of as associated with "normal" electricity, which is usually considered to be the movement of electrons. It is the electron that is at the heart of electricity in the electronic world we live in. Wikipedia has all these facts and more. A link is provided.
The atomic number is equal to the number of protons.
higher is the no of shared pairs of electrons higher will be the bond dissociation energy.
oxygen
Depending on the valence electrons an atom has, it will have different chemical properties. An atom with its lastest orbital full (noble gases) will be chemically stable, and won't react at all. They will have very low fusion points.An atom with an electron missing (hallogen), or a single or two electron of valence (alkanine metals), will be very reactive, and will tend to form strong ionic bonds with other atoms. They will tend to have very high fusion points when combined.The arrangement of electrons in an atom determines the ease with which the atom will form chemical bonds.
Protons are positively charged, electrons are negatively charged. Each atom has the same number of electrons as protons.
yes
The nucleus of an atom is made up of neutrons and protons. Neutrons are neutral and protons have a positive charge so the nucleus is positively charged. Around the nucleus there are orbiting electrons which are negatively charged. The positive nucleus and the negative electrons make the overall charge of the atom neutral
The atomic number is the same as the number of protons. It is unrelated to the number of neutrons.
Atomic Mass (of an isotope) - number of protons (of an isotope) = number of neutrons (of an isotope)
His idea was that electrons just floated around in a pool of protons. Knowing this, you could relate the pool of protons to the dough of a cookie and the electrons to the chocolate chips located all over the dough, therefore connecting the two subjects.
Protons don't really relate to electricity. Electron do because electricity is the flow of electrons through a wire. Protons don't really relate to electricity except in some nuclear physics applications. Electrons do because electricity, by definition, is the flow of electrons through a wire. In its most fundamental form, electricity is the movement of charged particles. Protons qualify because they are charged particles. We don't usually cause protons to "flow" like we commonly do electrons, though we do use them frequently in particle accelerators. But protons are not generally thought of as associated with "normal" electricity, which is usually considered to be the movement of electrons. It is the electron that is at the heart of electricity in the electronic world we live in. Wikipedia has all these facts and more. A link is provided.
No, the atomic number relates to the number of protons and electrons. say if the atomic number is 8 and the atomic mass is 17. by looking at the atomic number you can tell there are 8 protons and 8 electrons. but now you want to find the number of neutrons. you see that the atomic mass is 17. so you subtract the atomic number from the atomic mass. which is 17-8= 9. so there are 8protons, 8electrons, and 9 neutrons. hope this helps you.
The atomic number is equal to the number of protons.
Elements whose atoms have the same number of outer electrons have similar properties..
The number of neutrons and protons together constitutes the mass number of a single isotope of an element.
they relate becuse the relate