Respectively:
H-1,0,1
C-6,6,6
N-7,7,7
O-8,7,8
The Atomic Mass number of an element is the sum of the protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom of that element.The relative atomic mass is the average atomic mass number of all the known isotopes of an element.
Carbon has 6 protons, 6 electrons, and 6 neutrons because 12.011 is rounded to 12.000 so 12.000-6=6 so 6 neutrons.
Carbon 14 has 6 protons, 8 neutrons, and (in the neutral atom) 6 electrons.
The element carbon (C) has 6 protons and 6 electrons as its atomic number is 6. The number of neutrons depends on the isotope under consideration. C-12, C-13 and C-14 isotopes have 6, 7 and 8 neutrons respectively.
Carbon 13 has 7 neutrons.The atomic mass represents the total number of protons and electrons. Carbon atoms have 6 protons. Therefore, the atomic mass being 13, it has 7 neutrons.
The Atomic Mass number of an element is the sum of the protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom of that element.The relative atomic mass is the average atomic mass number of all the known isotopes of an element.
That seems to be an invalid notation. The subscript refers to the number of protons (5=Boron), but 'C' refers to the element (Carbon). Ignoring the 'C', Protons: 5 (Boron) Neutrons: 13-5= 8 Neutrons Electrons: 4+5= 9 Electrons
Here is the isotopic notation for carbon 14. From looking at the isotopic notation, you can find the number of protons, neutrons and electrons in an atom. Protons- The atomic number is 6, so there are 6 protons Electrons- If the atom is neutral the number of protons equals the number of electrons, so there are also 6 electrons Neutrons- The mass number equals the number of protons + neutrons, and 14-6 leaves 8 neutrons 14 C 6
its atomic numberthe number of neutrons
Carbon (symbol C, atom number 6) is build up with:6 protons, 6 electrons and 6 or 7 or 8 neutrons, depending on the mass number of the three possible isotopes: C-(12) has 6 neutrons and C-(13) or (14) has 7 or 8 of them respectively.Six of each in carbon-12, the most common isotope.
An element must always have the same number of protons as it's atomic number. The number of electrons may vary, making an atom into an ion, and the number of neutrons can also vary which is why we have different isotopes of the same element.
An atom?æconsist of protons,electrons and neutrons. Protons are positively charged, electrons are negatively charged,?æ while neutrons are not charged.?æIts neutral because the number of protons and electrons are equal.
Carbon has 6 protons, 6 electrons, and 6 neutrons because 12.011 is rounded to 12.000 so 12.000-6=6 so 6 neutrons.
Carbon 14 has 6 protons, 8 neutrons, and (in the neutral atom) 6 electrons.
C means carbon, which consists of six protons, six neutrons and six electrons. (The number of neutrons may be more or less.)
I can answer this if it were Carbon(atom number 6 in the periodic table), 'c-4' is unknown to me as element. C-4 ion does not exist and should preferably be written as C4-. Berillium is atom no. 4.So:C has 6 protons and 6 electronsNeutron number is different for each type of isotope:Isotope C-12, with mass number 12, has 6 neutronsIsotope C-13, with mass number 13, has 7 neutronsIsotope C-14, with mass number 14, has 8 neutrons
C-13 has 1 extra neutron (6 protons, 7 neutrons, 6 electrons) where C-12 is in ordinary form (6 protons, 6 neutrons, 6 electrons)