The name is proton.
The positively charged subatomic particles that remain when a hydrogen atom loses an electron are protons. Each hydrogen atom normally contains one proton, and when an electron is lost, the proton remains with a net positive charge.
It loses an electron
No, if a hydrogen atom loses its electron, it becomes a positively charged hydrogen ion (H+). This is because the electron carries a negative charge, and when it is removed from the atom, the remaining proton in the nucleus gives the atom a net positive charge.
When a chlorine atom and a hydrogen atom exchange electrons, the chlorine atom gains an electron to form a chloride ion (Cl-), while the hydrogen atom loses an electron to form a hydrogen ion (H+). This exchange is a type of ionic bond formation where the atoms become charged ions.
A proton
When an atom loses an electron, it becomes a positively charged ion.
When a hydrogen atom loses an electron, it is simply a proton.
When an atom loses an electron it becomes a positively charged ion.
Potassium. This can be seen by the potassium setting itself on fire in water. Can lithium, carbon or hydrogen do that?
Hydrogen can exist as a positively charged ion (H+) when it loses its electron, or as a neutral atom with no net charge when it has one electron and one proton.
when an atom loses an electron it becomes positive because it just lot a negetive part to its structure. The name given to these positively charged particles is Cation
When a metal atom loses an electron, it loses energy. This energy corresponds to the difference in energy levels between the electron's initial position and its final position outside the atom.