Iodine has 53 protons and the only stable isotope has 74 neutrons.
Iodine. All isotopes of an element have the same number of protons, which is also the atomic number and identifies the element.
The neutral isotope of iodine 129I has 53 protons, 76 neutrons but 53 electrons.
The anion of 129I has 54 electrons (129I-).
If it has 51 protons it must be Antimony (Sb).
Iodine has 53 protons
Iodine
W-Tungsten.
Depends on the element. Check out the "Periodic Table".
The atomic mass is the combined mass of the protons, neutrons and electrons in an element. It can be found below the element's symbol on the periodic table.
There are 11 protons and 12 neutrons. And that does not depend on the periodic table. Sodium had 11 protons and 12 neutrons long before the periodic table, or even human, beings existed!
its one
First, find its atomic mass on the periodic table and subtract the number of protons (element number) from it and there you go
Electrons, protons, neutrons
Depends on the element. Check out the "Periodic Table".
The atomic mass is the combined mass of the protons, neutrons and electrons in an element. It can be found below the element's symbol on the periodic table.
protons,neutrons,electrons, and the element name
There are 11 protons and 12 neutrons. And that does not depend on the periodic table. Sodium had 11 protons and 12 neutrons long before the periodic table, or even human, beings existed!
The mass of an element is the sum of the protons and neutrons in an atom. It is usually listed right on the periodic table.
This is stable isotope of iodine - iodine-127.
its one
oxygen is a element one the periodic table, as such it is made up of protons electrons and neutrons. so there are protons in oxygen but there is not oxygen in protons.
No. Atoms on the Periodic Table are listed by element in order of atomic number, which is the number of protons an atom contains. The number of neutrons in the atoms of an element usually varies among several isotopes.
The nucleus contains the protons and neutrons. The number of protons determines the atomic number of the element and the number of protons and the number of neutrons together determine the atomic mass.
The Periodic Table of the Elements includes most of this information (but not the number of neutrons). The Chart of the Nuclides (or Table of the Isotopes) includes all of the information.