You can't just remove a proton or an electron. But theoretically, it will become an atom of the compound just before it in the Periodic Table. For example, Oxygen will become Nitrogen.
I think you won't have a atom because the electron, proton and neutron is the basic part of the atom.
proton (a particle)
nothing, they both even out!
a Proton. A hydrogen-1 atom (the most abundant isotope of hydrogen) has no neutrons and only 1 proton. So the atom is 1 proton and 1 electron. So the ion, when the electron is removed, the entire ion is just 1 single proton.
You are left with just a proton (99.985% of the time).
remove either a proton or electron OR add a proton or electron...
electron-negative, proton-positive, neutron-neutral
Most probably, when all electrons a removed from an atom, that atom will not have or carry out the Newton's third law of motion. This means that the atom will let any object that has a pushing force, go through that atom Added: In the special case of Hydrogen when only one (= 'ALL' ) electron is removed a stable ion is formed: H+ , which is also the same as a (single) proton
Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.
As mass of elactron is very small as compare to proton and neutron So there will be no effect on mass if electron is removed
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.