The atomic number for Oxygen is 8.
Proton number is equal to atomic number. For oxygen both numbers are 8.
Atomic number= number of protons. Hydrogen atomic number=1
The atomic number of oxide depends on the specific element it is composed of. For example, the atomic number of oxygen, which commonly forms oxides, is 8. Other elements forming oxides will have their own unique atomic numbers.
The mass number is the sum of neutrons and protons in the atomic nucleus and is different for each isotope of any element. For example the isotope oxygen-16 has the mass number 16. The atomic weight of oxygen (not atomic mass) is [15,99903; 15,99977] after the IUPAC Tables - 2009. The atomic number of oxygen is 8.
Their atomic number (8) is the same. They are both isotopes of oxygen, with different numbers of neutrons.
Oxygen come on now you breath it. :)
Oxygen has 8 protons. for this reason its atomic number is 8
It depends on the atomic number. For example some atomic numbers create oxygen and others create metal such as zinc.
The atomic number of carbon is 6, which means it has 6 protons in its nucleus. Oxygen has an atomic number of 8, indicating it has 8 protons. These atomic numbers are fundamental to identifying the elements and their properties on the periodic table.
Elemental hydrogen and helium have atomic masses less than twice their atomic numbers.
Carbon Monoxide is a compound with symbols of CO compounds do not have atomic numbers. Carbon is an element with the atomic number 6 oxygen is an element with the atomic number 8
The mass number is the sum of protons and neutrons in the atomic nucleus of chemical elements. All mass numbers are integers. The atomic weight is not an an integer because is calculated taking in the account the isotopic composition of an element; also the mass excess has a role.