You would find 79 protons and 118 neutrons
The nucleus of the atom of the most common isotope of gold has 97 protons and 100 neutrons
Use the sun to shine on it shininess and it will work.
No. A "broken" atom of gold may be an ion, but it does not have the same chemical properties as an intact atom of gold.
An element of gold is made up of many gold atoms, and an atom of gold is only one atom.
An S inside a gold ring is the maker's stamp. If the ring were not gold and had an S inside it would stand for sterling silver.
The nucleus of the atom of the most common isotope of gold has 97 protons and 100 neutrons
I don't know but i know that reef gold is found inside rocks.
Use the sun to shine on it shininess and it will work.
No. A "broken" atom of gold may be an ion, but it does not have the same chemical properties as an intact atom of gold.
An element of gold is made up of many gold atoms, and an atom of gold is only one atom.
An element of gold is made up of many gold atoms, and an atom of gold is only one atom.
An S inside a gold ring is the maker's stamp. If the ring were not gold and had an S inside it would stand for sterling silver.
This is a chemical element. You can find the how many electron in a single atom by using a periodic table.
the answer ia an atom of gold
An atom
A compound can contain a single atom of gold, but a single atom of gold alone, by itself, cannot be a compound.
The smallest particle in gold should in fact be gold. Gold is an element, Au, and thus should only contain gold atoms. You could also argue that some subatomic particle is the smallest particle in gold.