Potassium I reckon
No. All atoms, except the most abundant isotope of hydrogen, can be divided into the subatomic particles protons, neutrons, and electrons. The most abundant hydrogen isotope does not have neutrons.
Hydrogen-1, the most abundant isotope of hydrogen, has a mass number of 1. It has one proton and no neutrons.
The number of neutrons in any element depends on the isotope of the element you are referring to. Potassium has 24 isotopes, ranging from 32K to 55K. The most stable natural isotope is 39K, which would have 20 neutrons.
All the chemical elements contain atoms; and each atom is formed from protons, neutrons, electrons. The most abundant carbon isotope - 12C - has 6 protons, neutrons and electrons.
The amount of neutrons can always be found by taking the atomic number from the mass number. Uranium has 146 neutrons. It depends on the isotope. See the link below for a list of uranium isotopes and how many neutrons are in each. You cannot tell how many neutrons it has with the given information. The most abundant isotope happens to be 238U, which has 146 neutrons.
Silicon is the second most abundant element, and its isotope Silicon-28 has fourteen neutrons (neutrons vary between isotopes, but silicon-28 is the most abundant).
Se-78 isotope will have 44 neutrons Br-79 isotopes will have 44 neutrons
13 protons means it must be aluminum (Al). 15 neutrons means its atomic mass will be 28. This is not aluminum's most abundant isotope, but it is still aluminum.
Isotopes are species of atoms having same atomic no. but different atomic masses. So an isotope has either lesser or more neutrons than the usual atom of the element ( often called the most abundant isotope).
No. All atoms, except the most abundant isotope of hydrogen, can be divided into the subatomic particles protons, neutrons, and electrons. The most abundant hydrogen isotope does not have neutrons.
In the most abundant isotope of iron, there are 26 protons and 26 neutrons.
Hydrogen-1, the most abundant isotope of hydrogen, has a mass number of 1. It has one proton and no neutrons.
The simple answer is 8 neutrons. But this depends on which oxygen isotope you are talking about. Oxygen-16, the most abundant oxygen isotope, has 8 neutrons.
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The most abundant isotope has 7 each.
The number of neutrons in any element depends on the isotope of the element you are referring to. Potassium has 24 isotopes, ranging from 32K to 55K. The most stable natural isotope is 39K, which would have 20 neutrons.
All the chemical elements contain atoms; and each atom is formed from protons, neutrons, electrons. The most abundant carbon isotope - 12C - has 6 protons, neutrons and electrons.