The diameter of proton is 1*10 raised to the minus power of 15 meter. The diameter of hydrogen atom is 1* 10 raised to the power of minus 10 meter. The formula for volume of spere is 4/3*22/7*r raised to 3. From this you get that volume of the hydrogen atom is approximately 4,000,000,000,000,000 times more than that of proton. That means most of the atom is empty space.
No. The proportion volume taken up by the protons in an atom is incredibly small. The vast majority of the volume of an atom is empty space.
The element with one proton per atom is hydrogen.
A hydrogen atom, H, is a proton (as nucleus) with one electron orbitting around it. A proton is just (the same as above) one proton, which lacks the electron: H+ .
A single proton
Uranium minus a proton (hydrogen atom) is protactinium.? That is, if you could get it to do that - this is an unusual reaction.
No. The proportion volume taken up by the protons in an atom is incredibly small. The vast majority of the volume of an atom is empty space.
The element with one proton per atom is hydrogen.
A hydrogen atom has a diameter of about 60 picometers while a proton has a diameter of 1.75 femotometers. So a hydrogen atom's diameter is about 35,000 times that of a proton.
Hydrogen has one proton in its nucleus.
Hydrogen proton
The element with one proton per atom is hydrogen.
The answer for a hydrogen atom would be about 100 meters across a proton is about 1/10,000 th of the diameter of a hydrogen atom.
A proton is a subatomic particle which is the same in whichever element it is found. A proton from a Xenon atom is no different to that from a Hydrogen atom or a Uranium atom.
A hydrogen atom, H, is a proton (as nucleus) with one electron orbitting around it. A proton is just (the same as above) one proton, which lacks the electron: H+ .
a Proton. A hydrogen-1 atom (the most abundant isotope of hydrogen) has no neutrons and only 1 proton. So the atom is 1 proton and 1 electron. So the ion, when the electron is removed, the entire ion is just 1 single proton.
Hydrogen
Hydrogen