No. The electron and proton have the same amount of charge. Its just that the electron's charge is negative and the proton's charge is positive.
In kilograms, an electron's mass is ~9 x 10^(-31). A proton's mass is ~1.7 x 10^(-27). The mass of the proton is more than 1000 times of an electron.
During electron capture, an electron and proton combine and are converted to a neutron.
the mass of an electron is actually about 1800 times lessthan a proton.
5, electron, proton, neutron, nucleus, and electron cloud.
None of them. A Lewis acid is a species which is an electron pair acceptor.
A proton donor is a molecule that donates it's protons to other molecules.
Yes, usually in acid/base reactions, hydrogen splits from the acid and will leave an electron to form a proton. It is called a proton because without any electrons, that's all it is: a proton with a charge of +1.
proton
Acid, when referring to the science term are proton donors that yield hydronium ions in a water solution, or electron-pair acceptors that combine with electron-pair donors or bases.
Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.
A proton is bigger than electron
An electron will not decay into a proton by any means.
A proton is bigger than electron
No. The electron and proton have the same amount of charge. Its just that the electron's charge is negative and the proton's charge is positive.
The currently accepted theory is the Lewis acid-base theory A Lewis base is an electron donor and a Lewis acid is a electron acceptor. Whether a compound is acid or base may not be obvious at first and difficult to work out. There are rules for working this out but you probably dont have to know them Generally, all you would probably have to know is that an acid is a proton [H+] donor and a base is proton acceptor
An electron is 1/1,836 of a proton.