All carbon has 6 protons: in atoms, compounds and all isotopes of it.
A negativelly charged carbon atom, C-. thi swould be an ion, specifically an anion.
Carbon only forms such ions in say mass spectrometer beams.
If it has 6 protons and 5 electrons, it would be a cation, C^+ with a plus 1 charge.
All isotopes of carbon have 6 protons.
You need to know the atomic number to find the element, and the atomic number equals the # of protons and electrons, which is 6. It is Carbon.
The number above Carbon, 6, indicates that the element has 6 protons. It is also assumed that the Carbon atom is neutral (in a neutral atom, there are the same number of electrons as protons), so there will be 6 electrons as well. There will also be 6 neutrons unless otherwise specified that the atom is an isotope (has a different number of neutrons). Also, the number under the Carbon symbol indicates the average mass number, or the average sum of neutrons and protons. since it is about 12, you can just subtract 6 protons to get 6 neutrons.
It's an isotope of Carbon, specifically Carbon-4. An atom in its neutral state will have equal numbers of protons and neutrons. The number of protons is also called the atomic number, and makes the specific atom what it is. (Carbon always has 6 protons, 5 protons is Boron and 7 protons is Nitrogen.) If there is an unequal number of neutrons, it usually indicates an isotope, an atom that isn't in the natural, most commonly occurring ground state. In this instance, it is Carbon-4. (Carbon-4, also called C-4 is a common explosive because of it's unstable nature.)
The number of protons defines the element. If an atom has six atoms, then it can only be carbon. If it has six neutrons, then it is 12C.
The atomic number is the number of protons in an atom (it also relates to the number of electrons in a stable atom). Each element has a unique number of protons, no matter what the isotope of that element is. For instance, carbon-12, carbon-13 and carbon-14 all have six protons - it's just the numbers of neutrons that varies. In this way you can tell immediately what element an atom belongs to by the number of protons.
An atom with six protons in the nucleus is a carbon element.
Carbon
Six. Carbon is element #6. Other carbon isotopes also have six protons.
For any Carbon atom, irrespective of its isotopic mass , there are 6(six) protons.
The basic Carbon atom has six protons and six electrons
An atom is carbon _because_ it has six protons. An isotope is any atom that has a differing atomic mass while maintaining the same elemental identity, i.e., the same number of protons.
Carbon Atom is the sixth element on periodic table and has a symbol of C. It is composed of six electrons protons, six and six neutrons.
No because the number of protons never changes or else the element changes.
You need to know the atomic number to find the element, and the atomic number equals the # of protons and electrons, which is 6. It is Carbon.
To find the amount of protons in an atom, you simply look at the atomic number. For example, if the question was, "how many protons are in an atom of carbon", you look at the periodic table and see that carbon is the atomic number six, therefore your answer would be six.
The atomic number is the number of protons found in an atom's nucleus, so the number of protons in carbon is six.
There are six electrons in a carbon atom, the isotope does not change this.