Any atom with 4 protons is an atom of beryllium. If the atom is neutral, it must also have 4 electrons. However, 5 neutrons specifies an isotope, specifically Be-9, rather than an element as such.
Be Beryillium (i don't know if that's how you spell it but yeah)
Beryllium
There is no such element: an element is neutral, so it has equal numbers of protons and electrons.Impossible:2 protons 4 neutrons and 3 electrons is the IMpossible He-1 isotope with mass number 6 (=2p+4n). Helium does not accept electrons because it is noble.Possible:2 protons 4 neutrons and 2 electrons is (elemental) Helium, isotope with mass number 6 (=2p+4n)3 protons 4 neutrons and 3 electrons is (elemental) Lithium
There are particular isotopes that have similar number of electrons and neutrons. Some of these isotopes include hydrogen-2, helium-4, carbon-12 and nitrogen-14.
4 protons, 4 electrons and 6 neutrons.
That would Beryllium, with an atomic number of 4 and mass number of 9Hope this helped!
4 protons 4 electrons 5 neutrons subtract the number of of protons from the atomic weight
protrons=2 electrons=2 neutrons=2
berylium has 4 protons. It has 4 electrons too.
Be- Beryllium
neutrons
be is a s block metal element. It contains 4 protons and 4 electrons.
There is no such element: an element is neutral, so it has equal numbers of protons and electrons.Impossible:2 protons 4 neutrons and 3 electrons is the IMpossible He-1 isotope with mass number 6 (=2p+4n). Helium does not accept electrons because it is noble.Possible:2 protons 4 neutrons and 2 electrons is (elemental) Helium, isotope with mass number 6 (=2p+4n)3 protons 4 neutrons and 3 electrons is (elemental) Lithium
There are too many electrons. This would be a negative ion of lithium-6 (stable but less common isotope) that does not occur naturally. The element with 3 electrons, 3 protons, and *4 neutrons* is lithium-7, the most common isotope. It forms a stable positive ion (2 electrons).
The mass of the isotope 7Be is 7,01692983(11) u. The isotope 7Be has 4 protons, 3 neutrons and 4 electrons (not 6).
There is no such element: an element is neutral, so it has equal numbers of protons and electrons.Impossible:2 protons 4 neutrons and 3 electrons is the IMpossible He-1 isotope with mass number 6 (=2p+4n). Helium does not accept electrons because it is noble.Possible:2 protons 4 neutrons and 2 electrons is (elemental) Helium, isotope with mass number 6 (=2p+4n)3 protons 4 neutrons and 3 electrons is (elemental) Lithium
It could possibly be a stable isotope of Beryllium
All beryllium atoms have 4 protons and 4 electrons. The number of neutrons is characteristic of a particular isotope, not of beryllium as a whole, and may be determined by subtracting 4, the number of protons, from the mass number of the isotope.
There are particular isotopes that have similar number of electrons and neutrons. Some of these isotopes include hydrogen-2, helium-4, carbon-12 and nitrogen-14.