58
93Np237 isotope has 144 neutrons (237 - 93 = 144)
Neptunium has 93 protons and electrons.Number of neutrons = Mass number of an isotope - 93
64 protons 64 electrons The number of neutrons may vary depending on the isotope under consideration. There are 6 stable isotopes 154Gd, 155Gd, 156Gd, 157Gd, 158Gd and 160Gd with 90, 91, 92, 93, 94 and 95 neutrons
41 protons 41 electrons 52 neutrons
Neptunium is a chemical element with the symbol Npand atomic number 93.So it has 93 protons and the neutral atom has also 93 electrons.It is a radioactive metallic element, the first transuranic element and it belongs to the actinide series. Its most stable isotope is 237Np, with 237-93=144 neutrons
93 protons and 93 electrons; the number of neutrons is different for each isotope. For ex.: 144 neutrons in neptunium 237 Tthe number of neutrons is the difference between the atomic mass of an isotope and the atomic number. the sky is pnk
This is the isotope zirconium-93 (51 n + 2 n =53 n plus 40 p).
This isotope don't exist.Added:That's right, the element with atom number 41 has 41 protons and should be :Naturally occurring niobium which is composed of one stable isotope, 41Nb(93)This means that the mass number (= total of protons AND neutrons) is 93!, so this isotope of Nb has 93-41 = 52 neutrons!As of 2003, at least 32 radioisotopes have also been synthesized, ranging in atomic mass from 81 to 113, so they have 40 to 82 neutrons. This makes the amount of 20 neutrons erronous.However: if the question were 'inverted' to:"What element has 21 (not 41) protons and 20 neutrons" instead, there is a possible more realistic question.The answer to this is: scandium, 21Sc(41) This unstable isotope of Sc, with mass number 41, has 21 protons and 20 neutrons.
Potassium has three naturally occurring isotopes: potassium-39, potassium-40, and potassium-41. The most common isotope is potassium-39, which makes up about 93% of naturally occurring potassium.
The isotope plutonium-239, which is synthesized from uranium, has 94 protons (like all isotopes of plutonium) and 145 neutrons in its nucleus. Use the link below for more information on plutonium.
The inert gas xenon (chemical symbol Xe) has an atomic number of 54, and it has 54 protons in its nucleus. The number of neutrons varies, however. Let's look at what's going on. There are 37 different know isotopes of xenon. They range from Xe-110 (with 56 electrons) through Xe-147 (with 93 neutrons). Among these isotopes are the 9 stable isotopes of xenon. They are Xe-124 (70 neutrons), Xe-126 (72 neutrons), Xe-128 (74 neutrons), Xe-129 (75 neutrons), Xe-130 (76 neutrons), Xe-131 (77 neutrons), Xe-132 (78 neutrons), Xe-134 (80 neutrons), and Xe-136 (82 neutrons). Everything other than these is unstable and will have a neutron count that can be found with simple math. Given an isotope, like Xe-147, subtract the number of protons (the atomic number), which is 54, from the isotope number, which is 147 in this case. The 147 - 54 means that there will be 97 protons in the nucleus of a xenon-147 atom. A link can be found below.
Proton: 64 Electron: 64 Neutron: 93 if my math is correct