a)
(well if it has different number of protons or electrons then it would be called an "ionized atom" either positive if more protons or negative if more electrons.)
- if there are more neutrons inside the nucleus then protons you got isotopes -
b)
(well if it has different number of protons or electrons just look at the Periodic Table and count how many protons it has and look at the Periodic Table that will tell you what an atom will be )
A hydrogen atom consists of a proton in its nucleus along with an electron orbiting around it. A proton is a subatomic particle found in the nucleus of an atom and carries a positive charge. In comparison, a hydrogen atom is a neutral particle since it has an equal number of protons and electrons.
remove either a proton or electron OR add a proton or electron...
Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.
I think you won't have a atom because the electron, proton and neutron is the basic part of the atom.
In the atom proton is positively charged and the electron is negatively charged.
It is the atom of deuterium. Its nucleus is composed of a proton and one neutron. The atom has one electron that is orbiting around the nucleus.
1 proton and 1 electron make a hydrogen atom. The proton carries a positive charge, and the electron carries a negative charge, creating a stable neutral atom.
A hydrogen atom has one proton and one electron. The proton is located in the nucleus, while the electron orbits around the nucleus. This balance of one proton and one electron gives hydrogen its neutral charge.
Yes. One proton, one electron, no neutrons.
Smallest to Largest.. - Electron - Proton - Atom - Compound - Molecule
The proton CHARGE has an impact (if the proton's charge were different, the atom's size would be different). However, the proton SIZE is more or less irrelevant. The increase in size of the atom due to the proton is very very negligible. It has been proven that the density of the Nucleus is constant in all atoms of all elements. This means, the nucleus does increase in size, if there are more protons. However, The majority of the size of an atom comes from the electron orbits. Thus the main factor for atom size is electron orbits.
No. While the proton has the opposite charge of the electron, the proton will not flow from atom to atom like the electron does because the strong atomic force holding the proton in the nucleus is much more powerful than the electromagnetic force.