Cesium has 55 protons. The non-ionic form has 55 electrons. The number of neutrons, however, varies depending on which isotope you are talking about. The stable isotope 133Cs has 78 neutrons. The most commonly used unstable isotope 137Cs has 82 neutrons. There are isotopes of cesium ranging all the way from 112Cs at 57 neutrons to 151Cs at 96 neutrons. For more information, please see the Related Link below.
3
4+ because however much more protons there are then that is the charge
They are very dense
Atomic Number: This is the number of protons an element has. Answer: 26 Atomic Mass: Ignoring electrons, which are incredibly small and don't have much of an effect on the mass... This is the number of protons plus the number of neutrons Answer: 56 (26 protons + 30 neutrons) Net Charge: Protons are positive and electrons are negative. The net charge can be found by subtracting the number of electrons from the number of protons. 0 is neutral. Answer: +3 (26 protons - 23 electrons)
35 protons
scandium has 21 protons!
Chlorine has 17 protons.
36 Protons. Check the Atomic Number, because it stands for the number of Protons.
60 protons, as its atomic number is 60.
There are 24 protons in Chromium (Cr). The atomic number of an element is the same as the number of protons.
Protons and neutrons have about the same mass, but electrons are much, much lighter.
no. protons and neutrons are MUCH larger than electrons.
The atomic number of xenon is 54. So there are 54 protons in xenon.
Yes.
Lithium, regardless of its atomic mass, has 3 protons.
Cesium has 55 protons. The non-ionic form has 55 electrons. The number of neutrons, however, varies depending on which isotope you are talking about. The stable isotope 133Cs has 78 neutrons. The most commonly used unstable isotope 137Cs has 82 neutrons. There are isotopes of cesium ranging all the way from 112Cs at 57 neutrons to 151Cs at 96 neutrons. For more information, please see the Related Link below.