There are 1 proton, 0 neutron and 1 electron in H1.
1 electron
1 proton
0 neutrons
H1 (most abudant) has one proton and one electron.
H2 (deuterium) has one proton, one neutron, and one electron.
H3 (tritium) has one proton, two neutrons, and one electron.
Hydrogen-1 (protium) has 1 proton and 1 electron.
Neutrons are 'zero' charged. Protons are positively(+) charged. Electrons are negatively(-) charged. For any neutrally charged atom , the number of protons(+) equals the number of electrons(-); the charges balance. However, when an atom loses or gains electrons it becomes a charged species and is called an ION , not an atom. If the number of protons changes then it is a completely different element. Neutrons have no effect on the charge of an atom/ion, they only effect the atomic mass. Here are some examples. Hydrogen has one proton and one electrons ; charges balance. However the hydrogen ion has one proton and no electrons (H^+) Chlorine has two isotopes l different number of neutrons Chlorine - 35 , 17 protons , 18 neutrons and 17 electrons The Chloride(-35) ion has 17 protons , 18 neutrons and 18 electrons (35)Cl^-) , the chloride -35 ion Chlorine - 37, 17 protons , 20 neutrons and 17 electrons The Chloride(-37) ion has 17 protons , 20 neutrons, and 18 electrons (37)Cl^-) , the chloride - 37 ion. The Chloride(-37) ion has 17 protons, 20 neutrons and 18 electrons Notice , for the given element the number of protons remains the same, the different isotopes have different number of neutrons, and the ions have a different number of electrons.
a regular boron atom (5B11 isotope) has six neutrons and five protons
For a given atomic number. Then that neutrally charged element has the same number of protons and electrons. e.g. Carbon ; Atomic Number 6, has 6 protons and 6 electrons. For a given atomic MASS , the the number of neutrons can be found, by subtracting the mass from the atomic no. e.g. Carbon ; Atomic Mass 12, has 12 - 6 = 6 neutrons. Most elements can exhibit different atomic masses , known as ISOTOPES. , This is when the given element has a different number of neutrons. e.g. Carbon ; atomic mass 13 , has 13 - 6 = 7 neutrons , described as Carbon -13 or C-13 Similarly Carbon again ; atomic mass 14, has 14 - 6 = 8 neutrons, described as Carbon-14 or C-14. A further example is hydrogen. It exhibits three isotopes. protium ; 1 proton, 0 neutrons and 1 electron Mass = 1 (H-1 or H) deuterium ; 1 proton, 1 neutron and 1 electron Mass = 2 (H-2 or D) tritium ; 1 proton 2 neutrons and 1 electrons. Mass = 3 (H-3 or T) Notice in all three isotopes the number of protons remains the same, so it is still the same element. Carbon
Proton is stable subatomic particle with a unit of positive electric charge and a mass 1,836 times that of the electron.Protons are found in the atomic nucleus along with neutrons. A single proton is the nucleus of an atom of ordinary hydrogen; as such, it is identical to the hydrogen ion (H+). Protons have antimatter counterparts (antiprotons), with the same mass but a negative charge.
Atoms consist of three smaller particles called as proton, electron and neutron.Atom of every element has these three particles only, just their no. differ from element to element.Added:However there is one exception: The first smallest and lightest one, Hydrogen (symbol H) does NOT have a neutron at all, just ONE proton and ONE electron.
no the proton and the neutron are in a atom if there are so many protons it will over power the neutron if there are to many neutrons it will over power the proton neutrons and protons must be equal for the atom to be stable.
There are only one proton and electron. But it contains 2 neutrons.
All chemical elements are formed from protons, neutrons (excepting H-1) and electrons.
Neutrons are 'zero' charged. Protons are positively(+) charged. Electrons are negatively(-) charged. For any neutrally charged atom , the number of protons(+) equals the number of electrons(-); the charges balance. However, when an atom loses or gains electrons it becomes a charged species and is called an ION , not an atom. If the number of protons changes then it is a completely different element. Neutrons have no effect on the charge of an atom/ion, they only effect the atomic mass. Here are some examples. Hydrogen has one proton and one electrons ; charges balance. However the hydrogen ion has one proton and no electrons (H^+) Chlorine has two isotopes l different number of neutrons Chlorine - 35 , 17 protons , 18 neutrons and 17 electrons The Chloride(-35) ion has 17 protons , 18 neutrons and 18 electrons (35)Cl^-) , the chloride -35 ion Chlorine - 37, 17 protons , 20 neutrons and 17 electrons The Chloride(-37) ion has 17 protons , 20 neutrons, and 18 electrons (37)Cl^-) , the chloride - 37 ion. The Chloride(-37) ion has 17 protons, 20 neutrons and 18 electrons Notice , for the given element the number of protons remains the same, the different isotopes have different number of neutrons, and the ions have a different number of electrons.
1 of each
Respectively: H-1,0,1 C-6,6,6 N-7,7,7 O-8,7,8
A positive atom has only protons and neutrons and no electrons. The only example is Protium which is H+.
a regular boron atom (5B11 isotope) has six neutrons and five protons
There are many different types of ions, having many different quantities of electrons and protons. The H+ ion has one proton and no electrons. That's the simplest.
For a given atomic number. Then that neutrally charged element has the same number of protons and electrons. e.g. Carbon ; Atomic Number 6, has 6 protons and 6 electrons. For a given atomic MASS , the the number of neutrons can be found, by subtracting the mass from the atomic no. e.g. Carbon ; Atomic Mass 12, has 12 - 6 = 6 neutrons. Most elements can exhibit different atomic masses , known as ISOTOPES. , This is when the given element has a different number of neutrons. e.g. Carbon ; atomic mass 13 , has 13 - 6 = 7 neutrons , described as Carbon -13 or C-13 Similarly Carbon again ; atomic mass 14, has 14 - 6 = 8 neutrons, described as Carbon-14 or C-14. A further example is hydrogen. It exhibits three isotopes. protium ; 1 proton, 0 neutrons and 1 electron Mass = 1 (H-1 or H) deuterium ; 1 proton, 1 neutron and 1 electron Mass = 2 (H-2 or D) tritium ; 1 proton 2 neutrons and 1 electrons. Mass = 3 (H-3 or T) Notice in all three isotopes the number of protons remains the same, so it is still the same element. Carbon
No,the nucleus of an atom consists of protons and neutrons. The electrons orbit around the nucleus forming an electron cloud. The only exception to this is the atom of hydrogen(H) which nucleus consists only of one proton.
Proton is stable subatomic particle with a unit of positive electric charge and a mass 1,836 times that of the electron.Protons are found in the atomic nucleus along with neutrons. A single proton is the nucleus of an atom of ordinary hydrogen; as such, it is identical to the hydrogen ion (H+). Protons have antimatter counterparts (antiprotons), with the same mass but a negative charge.