55
Oh, dude, cesium-134 has 55 protons and around 79 neutrons. It's like the cool kid at the periodic table party, just hanging out with its atomic number of 55 and atomic mass of around 134. So, yeah, it's got its protons and neutrons chillin' like, "What's up, we're cesium-134."
You are looking for the symbol of cesium (Cs) and indication of its mass number. The mass number is the sum of the protons and neutrons. So if every atom of cesium has 55 protons, then the mass number of this isotope is 137. The mass number is indicated in superscript before the symbol: 137Cs
Caesium is in the first raw. Atomic number of it is 55. So it has 55 protons.
Manganese is a metal element. Atomic mass number of it is 55.
Cesium (Cs) typically forms a +1 cation, so it has 1 ion when it loses an electron.
All right Cesium is an Alkali Metal so it belongs to the first column of the periodic table. Every element in that column has a charge of 1+ as a cation. So to answer your question, a single Cesium atom loses 1 electron when it becomes a cation. The cation looks like this: Cs = 55 Electrons Cs^+ = 54 Electrons As you can see it only loses one :)
cesium will sink
You can tell how many protons an element has from its atomic number. So the atomic number of Strontium is 38..so it has 38 protons.
No. Cesium is an element and so cannot be broken down chemically.
Neutrons are completely separate from protons, so neutrons do not have any protons, and protons do not have any neutrons.
20 protons from calcium and 17 from each chlorine. So total of 54 protons.
The atomic number of phosphorus is 15. So there are 15 protons in the nucleus of protons