This is a chemical element. You can find the how many electron in a single atom by using a Periodic Table.
Tritium is 3H, so it has one proton, one electron (in the non-ionized state) and two neutrons.
Hydrogen contains one proton inside the nucleus and one electron revolving around the nucleus. Hydrogen has three isotopes namely protium, deuterium and tritium with 0, 1 and 2 neutrons respectively in the nucleus.
The hydrogen isotope ; protium. It has one proton and one electron only. However the other two isotopes of hydrogen do contain all three sub-atomic particles. Deuterium ; one proton, one neutron and one electron. Tritium ; one proton, two neutrons, and one electron. All three isotopes are Hydrogen because they all contain ONE proton. The most common isotope is protium , which is casually thought of a hydrogen. Deuterium (D) is 'heavy hydrogen' and used in the nuclear industry. Tritium (T) is 'super heavy hydrogen' and is radio active and the rarest isotope of hydrogen. NB All other atoms of elements in the Periodic Table contain protons, neutrons and electrons.
A hydrogen atom has 1 proton and 1 electron regardless of the isotope.Standard hydrogen(protium) has zero neutrons.The deuterium isotope has 1 neutron and the tritium (very radioactive) has 2 neutrons.
1s1...it is simply an isotope so the number of neutrons changes but the number of electrons remains the same
Tritium is 3H, so it has one proton, one electron (in the non-ionized state) and two neutrons.
A single electron contains no atoms; atoms contain electrons instead.
Tritium decays by beta decay (emits high energy electron converting one neutron to a proton) resulting in Helium-3.
There is one electron in every hydrogen atom. They have 1, 2 and 3 neutrons respectively in protium, deuterium and tritium.
Tritium (Hydrogen-3, H3, T) has 1 Proton, 2 Neutrons, and 1 Electron.
Things that glow in the dark like some rifle sights and military lensatic compasses contain tritium.
Hydrogen - 1 proton, 1 electron Deuterium - 1 proton, 1 neutron 1 electron Tritium - 1 proton, 2 neutrons, 1 electron
The element is hydrogen and the isotope is tritium (1H3)
Three isotopes: Protium, deuterium and tritium with 0, 1 and 2 neutrons. all isotopes have 1 proton and 1 electron.
Hydrogen contains one proton inside the nucleus and one electron revolving around the nucleus. Hydrogen has three isotopes namely protium, deuterium and tritium with 0, 1 and 2 neutrons respectively in the nucleus.
Three
no, but some luminescent signs contain radioactive tritium.