1. Uranium has 92 electrons and protons; also variable number of neutrons, depending on the isotope. The atomic weight is approx. 238.
2. Hydrogen (the isotope 1H) has 1 electron and 1 proton. The atomic weight is approx. 1.
Uranium atom is the heaviest.
A proton is a subatomic particle which is the same in whichever element it is found. A proton from a Xenon atom is no different to that from a Hydrogen atom or a Uranium atom.
yes
If an atom of uranium loses a proton, it becomes an atom of an element with one less proton in its nucleus, known as an isotope of a different element. This change can alter the atomic number, mass number, and chemical properties of the atom.
Atom Bomb = Uranium H-Bomb = Hydrogen
Uranium atom has 92 protons and electrons; the number of neutrons is different for each isotope.
Only the compound UH3 is possible and known.
No, Uranium has far more electrons. In a neutral atom number of electrons=number of protons=atomic number. Hydrogen has 1 electron. Uranium has 92.
Uranium neutral atom has 92 protons and electrons; the number of neutrons is different for each isotope.
Yes, the density of hydrogen gas is lower than that of uranium hexafluoride gas. Hydrogen gas is one of the lightest elements, while uranium hexafluoride gas is much denser due to the heavy uranium atom.
if the bomb is a fission bomb it will use uranium 235 for fuel. if the bomb is a thermonuclear bomb (fusion) it will use the element hydrogen and an isotope of hydrogen for fuel.
Yes and no. There are 3 isotopes of hydrogen. All are hydrogen but each is different because they have different weights because they have different numbers of neutrons. Hydrogen is an element and it is defined by the number of protons so, in that respect, all hydrogen is the same because all hydrogen has a single proton.