One, all three hydrogen isotopes have one electron,, because they are all hydrogen.
In a neutral hydrogen atom, there is one electron, regardless of the isotope.
Hydrogen has 1 electron while deuterium, which is an isotope of hydrogen, also has 1 electron. The number of electrons in an atom is determined by the atomic number of the element, which is 1 for hydrogen.
Normal Hydrogen has one proton. The isotope of Hydrogen called Deuterium has one proton and one neutron. The Isotope of hydrogen called Tritium has one proton and two neutrons. All isotopes of hydrogen have one electron.
It is hydrogen element. It is tritium isotope of hydrogen.
Every isotope of magnesium has 12 electrons.
Depends on the isotope can be 0 or 1 hydrogen is a highly unstable element that the electron Jumps betweent the two energy levels
If 42 is the atomic number then there is 42 electrons in isotope.
A hydrogen-1 isotope contain one proton, one electron, and 0 neutrons; this is the only naturally occcurring isotope with no neutrons in its structure.
Hydrogen itself is an atom. If that hydrogen atom were to lose/gain/share electrons it would become an isotope/ ion
Hydrogen atom: Atomic number: 1 Number of neutrons: 0 [for commonest isotope] Number of electrons: 1
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.
The isotope ¹H (protium) contains 1 proton and 1 electron. Since it is the lightest isotope of hydrogen, it has no neutrons. Therefore, ¹H⁺, which is a proton (and stripped of its electron), has 1 proton and 0 electrons, while still having 0 neutrons.