61 neutrons 47 protons and 47 neutrons
there are 61 neutrons in a the element silver
50 Neutrons.
== silver-107 and silver-109 have 60 and 62 neutrons, respectively. There are many isotopes of silver having a neutron count from 46 to 83.
Theoretically silver 47 would have no neutrons but it does not exist.
108 - 47 = 61 neutrons 47 = atomic number of silver = number of protons
The isotope 110Ag has 63 neutrons.
A silver atom has 47 protons and 61 neutrons.
There are about 61 neutrons in silver. It actually has less electrons and protons than neutrons, since it only has 47 of them.
47 protons, 47 electrons and 61 neutrons
47 protons, 47 electrons, and an average of 60.87 neutrons for all of silver's isotopes. Add: There are two naturally occurring silver isotopes, silver-107 and silver-109, which are named for their mass numbers, and which make up virtually 100% of silver atoms. The mass number of an isotope is the sum of protons (atomic number) and neutrons in the atom's nucleus. To find the number of neutrons, subtract the number of protons (atomic number) from the mass number. So a neutral silver-107 atom has 47 protons, 47 electrons, and 60 neutrons (107 - 47). A neutral silver-109 atom has 47 protons, 47 electrons, and 62 neutrons (109 - 47).
For the natural isotopes: - 107Ag has 60 neutrons - 109Ag has 62 neutrons
Silver is a expensive metal. It contains 47 protons.