Boron has 5 electrons and protons; the number of neutrons is specific for each isotope.
Number of neutrons in a boron isotope = Mass number - 5
Boron has 5 electrons and protons; the number of neutrons is specific for each isotope.
Number of neutrons in a boron isotope = Mass number - 5
5 protons and 6 electrons
three
Boron (symbol B, atom number 5) is build up with:5 protons, 5 electrons and 5 or 6 neutrons, depending on the mass number of the two possible isotopes: B-(10) has 5 neutrons and B-(11) has 6 of them respectively.
Neutrons do not affect the neutrality (or charge) of an atom; protons and electrons do. In order to be neutral, the number of protons must be the same as the number of electrons.
Disregard the electrons, as their relative mass is insignificant to that of protons and neutrons. To find atomic mass, add the numbers of protons and neutrons: 5 + 6 = 11 is the mass number.
you can't tell the atomic mass of an atom if either the number of protons or neutrons is missing. But Boron with 5 protons and 6 neutrons has and atomic mass of 11.
Boron
Boron is an atom or element, and it contains protons, electrons, and neutrons.
Boron 10: 5 protons, 5 neutrons, 5 electrons Boron 11: 5 protons, 6 neutrons, 5 electrons
5 protons and electrons and the number of neutrons depends on the isotope
5 Protons,6 Electrons,5 Neutrons
I think that's B, the symbol for the element boron. Boron has 5 protons and 5 electrons. The most common isotope has 6 neutrons. The other main isotope has only 5 neutrons.
Boron Boron BoronBoron's atomic number is 5, meaning 5 protons and 5 electrons.Boron's Relative Atomic Mass is approximately 10.8To find neutrons, you subtract the atomic number from the atomic mass.10.8 - 5 = 5.8 (or 5)Boron has 5 protons, 5 electrons and 5.8 neutrons
Five. The Atomic Number of Boron is 5 so it has five protons and 5 electrons. The Mass number of Boron is 11. Mass minus atomic number = number of neutrons = 6. BORON:Electrons = 5 Protons = 5 Neutrons = 6
Boron has 5 electrons and protons; the number of neutrons is specific for each isotope. Number of neutrons in a boron isotope = Mass number - 5
Boron has 5 protons and 5 electrons Boron has two stable isotopes, one with 5 neutrons and 6 neutrons.
Boron's atomic number is 5. So there are 5 protons and 5 electrons. In Boron-10, there are 5 neutrons (10 - 5 = 5)
Boron (symbol B, atom number 5) is build up with:5 protons, 5 electrons and 5 or 6 neutrons, depending on the mass number of the two possible isotopes: B-(10) has 5 neutrons and B-(11) has 6 of them respectively.
That seems to be an invalid notation. The subscript refers to the number of protons (5=Boron), but 'C' refers to the element (Carbon). Ignoring the 'C', Protons: 5 (Boron) Neutrons: 13-5= 8 Neutrons Electrons: 4+5= 9 Electrons