A silver ion.
isotope of silver
iodine has 53 and silver has 47
mass number = number of protons + number of neutrons. 47 = 20 + neutrons, so neutrons equal 27.
155 particles 47 protons 47 electrons 61 neutrons
There are 46 protons 34 neutrons and 12 electronsThere are 36 protons and 48 neutrons in the most abundant isotope of krypton, krypton-84. To find the number of protons, just find the atomic number. This is the same as the number of protons. To find the number of neutrons, take the mass number and subtract the atomic number. For example, carbon-12 has an atomic number of 6 and a mass number of 12. Carbon-12 has 6 protons and 6 neutrons. There are isotopes that have different numbers of neutrons.
The number of protons in an atom determines which element it is (i.e Silver-47 protons vs. Gold-79 protons)
47
The atomic number of silver is 47. So there are 47 protons
47 protons, 47 electrons and 61 neutrons
Silver (Ag) has 47 protons in its nucleus. Its atomic number is 47, which means is has 47 protons and 47 electrons.
47 protons means atomic number is 47, so look at your periodic table.... it's ag, or silver
47 protons and 107-47=60 neutrons
Silver has 47 protons
it has 47 protons because the atomic number is the same thing as the number of protons
Silver has 47 protons and gold has 79 protons.
47 protons, 47 electrons, and an average of 60.87 neutrons for all of silver's isotopes. Add: There are two naturally occurring silver isotopes, silver-107 and silver-109, which are named for their mass numbers, and which make up virtually 100% of silver atoms. The mass number of an isotope is the sum of protons (atomic number) and neutrons in the atom's nucleus. To find the number of neutrons, subtract the number of protons (atomic number) from the mass number. So a neutral silver-107 atom has 47 protons, 47 electrons, and 60 neutrons (107 - 47). A neutral silver-109 atom has 47 protons, 47 electrons, and 62 neutrons (109 - 47).
There are 47 protons in a silver atom. The number of neutrons depends on the isotope; the most common isotope of silver is 107Ag, which has 60 neutrons and represents just over half of all silver atoms; the rest is essentially all 109Ag, which has 62 neutrons. Other isotopes of silver do exist, but are unstable and radioactive.