Symbol: Br
Protons: 35
The symbol of Bromine is Br and number of protons(or atomic number) which is also equal to the number of electrons is 35
Bromine has 35 protons. The number 82 in bromine-82 refers to the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus, so bromine-82 has 35 protons like all bromine atoms.
To find the protons in Bromine, atoms always have the same number of protons as their atomic number, so since Bromine has an atomic number of 35, it has 35 protons. To find the average number of neutrons in Bromine, you take the the atomic mass and take away the number of protons (in this case 35), so since Bromine's atomic mass is 79.90, you take away 35 to get the number of neutrons. The average number of neutrons in Bromine is 44.90.
Bromine-79 has 44 neutrons and bromine-81 has 46 neutrons. All the isotopes of bromine has 35 protons.
The isotope of bromine called 81-bromine. Since the element you are describing has 35 electrons, it must also have 35 protons. Therefore you end up with bromine which is the 35th element (since the amount of protons are equal to the elements number). Adding 46 to 35 gives you the weight of the specific bromine isotope, since the weight of the element is also the name of the isotope. It is also not radioactive.
The atomic number of an element is equal to the number of protons in a single atom. Therefore, Bromine has 35 protons.
If an atom has 35 electrons, it will also have 35 protons and its atomic number will be 35. If you go to the periodic table an look up the element with atomic number 35 you will se it is the element Bromine and the symbol for the element is Br.
The nuclear symbol of bromine is ^79Br, which represents an atom of bromine with an atomic mass of 79 and an atomic number of 35.
An atom of bromine-81 has 35 protons, 35 electrons, and 46 neutrons. This is because the atomic number of bromine is 35, which corresponds to the number of protons and electrons, and the atomic mass of bromine-81 is 81, which is the sum of protons and neutrons.
There are 35 protons in bromine-80 (Br-80). This is because bromine has an atomic number of 35, which corresponds to the number of protons in its nucleus.
There is no such element. Atomic numbers represent how many protons are in the nucleus of an atom. Lithium's atomic number is three; it has three protons. An atom with 35.543 protons can't exist because there can't be a fraction of a proton - how can you have 35 and .543 protons? I think perhaps you confused atomic number with atomic mass. Chlorine's atomic mass is 35.543 grams.
Bromine is a liquid, and a non-metal. It's atomic number is 35, and it's atomic weight is 80. The chemical symbol of Bromine is Br. It has 35 protons, 35 electons, and has 45 neutrons.