Lithium
This element 53 is called: Iodine, diatomic element I2.
Any element with 7 protons would be Nitrogen
If you add 3 protons to lithium (which has 3 protons), you would create an element with 6 protons, which is carbon on the periodic table.
no and yes
The periodic number of an element signifies its number of protons. Hydrogen, the first element, has one proton. Helium, the second element, has two protons. Lithium, the third element, has three protons. I'm sure you can figure out the rest.
An ionic bond can form between an element with 11 protons (sodium) and an element with 17 protons (chlorine) to create sodium chloride (table salt). Sodium will donate an electron to chlorine, resulting in a stable arrangement of electronic configuration in both atoms.
An atom of an element is comprised of protons, electrons, and usually neutrons. The specific element is determined by the number of protons, and so there is only one particle that determines the element.
Adding protons changes the element, creating a new element with a different atomic number. The element with 3 protons is not aluminum, so adding 3 protons would create a different element rather than a 3+ ion of aluminum.
yes.
The three main parts of an element are protons, neutrons, and electrons.
The number of protons is the same as the atomic number of the element. for example if your element is magnesium with the atomic number 12 there would be 12 protons in the nucleus.
No, there can be no other element that has the same number of protons as sulfur, and that is because elements are defined by the number of protons that they have. Therefore no two elements can have the same number of protons; if they did, they would be the same element.