It would be Deuterium, also called Heavy Hydrogen.
No, a hydrogen atom does not have a neutron in its nucleus. A hydrogen atom consists of only one proton in its nucleus.
if you bombard a lithium 6 atom with a neutron, then it will form a helium 4 or alpha decay particle and a hydrogen 3 atom, but i dont see that happening, i would think you would need a bigger atom for it to go through radioactive decay, but im just giving my opinion, it could happen just as surely as i think it doesnt. but if alpha decay was to happen to a lithium 6 atom from neutron bombardment, you would get a helium 4 atom and a hydrogen 3 atom.
The neutrons of an atom are located in the nucleus (except hydrogen-1 isotope which has no neutrons).
The neutrons of an atom are located in the nucleus (except hydrogen-1 isotope which has no neutrons).
Hydrogen-1, (there is a trace of hydrogen-2 (deuterium) found in nature, and hydrogen-3 is an artificial isotope)
Hydrogen.
If hydrogen had a neutron, it wouldn't be hydrogen; it would be deuterium. If it had two neutrons, it would be tritium.
hydrogen-1 atom
protons
The nucleus of a hydrogen atom is formed by a single proton.
Hydrogen does not have any neutrons unless it is the isotope deuterium ( 1 neutron) or tritium (2 neutrons)
Hydrogen H+ ion is (i.s.o. 'can be thought of as ...) one proton.