the Atomic Mass, which is the mass of its protons and neutrons and electrons together
It tells you how many atoms of an element there are in a molocule.
It tells you (1) how many protons are in the element, and (2) what the element is since all atoms of an element will have the same number of protons.It's D. The number of protons in its atoms.It tells how many protons/electrons that element has.
The atomic number of an element tells you how many protons an atom of that element contains. This number is unique to each element and is found on the periodic table. The number of protons in an atom determines the element's identity.
The subscript, the little number below and after the element, tells how many atoms are in a single molecule.
It tells you (1) how many protons are in the element, and (2) what the element is since all atoms of an element will have the same number of protons.It's D. The number of protons in its atoms.It tells how many protons/electrons that element has.
That would be subscript.
The subscript number after a chemical symbol indicates how many atoms of that element are present in a single molecule of the compound.
atomic mass is the answer
The subscript to the right of an element tells you how many atoms of that particular element are in a molecule. For example, in the water molecule H2O, there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.
It is about the atomic numbers. The total of protons.
These atoms decide the chemical composition of the substance.
This is farely simple. The subscripts just tell you how many atoms of an element are in the compund. Like this: H20 - Water has 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom CO2 - Carbon Dioxide has 1 carbon atom and 2 oxygen atoms. hence the name carbon di(which means 2)oxide(oxygen). The numbers succeeding elements indicate the number of atoms of that particular element in the compound. For example, in H20, there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. In H2SO4, there ar two Hydrogen atoms, one Sulfur atom and four Oxygen atoms.