The number of neutrons of an isotope is the difference between the mass number of the isotope and the number of protons (equal to atomic number).
No, number of electron is not equal to the number of neutron ,as we can predict it from the difference of their masses only,
Nope, the atomic number is equal to the number of protons.
Atoms have equal numbers of protons and electrons.
the atomic number is equal to the number of electrons(-) and protons(+): that is why elements have no charge, as a neutron is neural
The charge on an electron is never equal to the charge on a neutron. An electron carries one negative charge and a neutron has no net charge.
yes
No, number of electron is not equal to the number of neutron ,as we can predict it from the difference of their masses only,
Nope, the atomic number is equal to the number of protons.
Atoms have equal numbers of protons and electrons.
In a neutral atom the protons and neutrons are equal; protons are determined by the element's atomic number. Therefore, the "neutron number" can refer to the atomic number- in a neutral atom only.
The atomic mass of a molecule is equal to the number of protons plus the number of neutrons.
the atomic number is equal to the number of electrons(-) and protons(+): that is why elements have no charge, as a neutron is neural
The mass of neutron is similar to the mass of proton, but not equal !
The charge on an electron is never equal to the charge on a neutron. An electron carries one negative charge and a neutron has no net charge.
The mass of a proton is equal to a neutron.
Mass no-the no of proton=no of neutron
The mass of 12 protons is approximately equal to 12 atomic mass units.