This is atom of the isotope hydrogen-1 (protium).
The hydrogen atom has one proton as its nucleus and one electron orbiting around the nucleus.
A neutral hydrogen atom consists of a single proton in its nucleus and a single electron orbiting the nucleus. The proton carries a positive charge, while the electron carries a negative charge. The overall charge of the neutral hydrogen atom is zero due to the equal and opposite charges of the proton and electron.
A hydrogen atom consists of a single proton at the nucleus and one electron orbiting around it.
Hydrogen atoms are made up of a single proton in the nucleus and one electron orbiting the nucleus.
To answer your question: no, hydrogen atoms (the isotope hydrogen-1, protium) consist of a single proton and a single electron.Although they can consist of one proton, one electron and up to six neutrons.
The simplest atom that has one electron and one proton is the Hydrogen atom.
Hydrogen is made up of one proton and one electron. It is the lightest and most abundant element in the universe.
This is a chemical element. You can find the how many electron in a single atom by using a periodic table.
Proton
Only one element has single proton(proton is correct spelling). The element is Hydrogen. It has a single proton in it's nucleus and no neutrons. A single electron revolves around in s subshell of 1st energy shell( K shell). A Hydrogen atom which has lost it's electron can be said to be proton. No other element known has single proton in the nucleus (protons only reside in nucleus of atom) of it's atom.
A proton has single positive charge neutrons have no charge and a electron has a single negative charge
A normal, positively charged hydrogen ion might be referred to as a proton, but certainly not as an electron -- it doesn't even contain any electrons!