Nothing in an atom has the same number of electrons. Instead, all atoms are composed of protons (+1 charge) and electrons (-1 charge), and most atoms also have neutrons
(no charge). The protons and neutrons are held together in a small cluster at the center of the atom called the nucleus and the number of protons identifies the type of atom (hydrogen, carbon, oxygen, etc.) The electrons move about the nucleus in volumes of space called orbitals and for neutral atoms the number of protons and electrons is the same. If the number of protons and electrons is not the same the atom has a net positive or negative charge and we call it an ion.
The number of electrons is equal to the number of protons. (Actually, electrons are not found in nucleus. They actually orbit nucleus.)
That is correct, assuming the substance is a neutral atom.
The number of electrons in an element are always the same, if they aren't it becomes an ion.
atomic number = number of protons = number of electrons (in a neutral atom)
The atomic number of an element equals the number of protons in the nucleus of each atom of the element.
The number of electrons in an atom is equal to the atomic number.
These atoms are called isoelectronic.
Other atoms of the same element, or ions of nearby elements.
The atomic number is equal to the number of protons in the nucleus and in a neutral atom will also equal the number of electrons.
It is equal to the no. of electrons in the atom. It is called the atomic number.
The number of electrons should equal the number of protons, otherwise you have an ion.
The protons and electrons are equal in number in a neutral atom
The number of protons is identical to the number of electrons when an atom is in a neutral state.
The number of protons in an atom is equal to its atomic number. In a neutral atom, the number of electrons is equal to that of protons. If the atom is negatively charged, add it to the number of electrons; and if positive, subtract.
In a neutral atom the number of protons is equal to the number of electrons. And by definition the atomic number of an atom is equal to the number of protons in it. So the atomic number of a neutral atom is equal to the number of protons or the number of electrons in the atom.
In a neutral atom, the number of protons is always equal to the number of electrons.
No - in fact it is quite rare
The atomic number is equal to the number of protons in the nucleus and in a neutral atom will also equal the number of electrons.
The number of protons in an atom of an element is equal to the number of electrons in that atom which is equal to that element's atomic number.
Atomic number represents the number of protons in the nucleus.
In a neutral atom, the number of protons is equal to the number of electrons. Therefore it is also equal to the atomic number of the particular atom.
It is equal to the no. of electrons in the atom. It is called the atomic number.
The number of protons in the nucleus of each atom that has the atomic number.
For a neutral atom, the number of protons is equal to the number of electrons.
The number of electrons should equal the number of protons, otherwise you have an ion.