Hydrogen, Deuterium, Tritium
Hydrogen has three isotopes
No the atomic number is same for the three isotopes of hydrogen (it is 1). The three isotopes of hydrogen differ by the number of neutrons.
The three isotopes of hydrogen are called: hydrogen (1H or H, no neutrons), deuterium (2H or D, one neutron), and tritium (3H or T, two neutrons).They each have their own special name to make it easier to refer to them. They are fairly commonly used in chemistry and physics (especially deuterium).
Hydrogen-1, Hydrogen-2, Hydrogen-3 They're isotopes.
There are three forms of Hydrogen (these are known as isotopes). These are normal hydrogen, deuterium and tritium.
hydrogen, deuterium, and tritium.
No - the lightest element Hydrogen has three known isotopes
Yes, all forms of hydrogen atoms are isotopes of the element. H-3 is one of the three possible isotopes of hydrogen.
my butt hole
No. Not hydrogen itself. However there are a total of three isotopes of hydrogen - Hydrogen, Deuterium, and Tritium. Tritium is radioactive
By definition Hydrogen has only one proton.
One, all three hydrogen isotopes have one electron,, because they are all hydrogen.