Uranium, i think, its also has 92 protons and 92 electrons
Uranium-238 isotope has 92 protons and 146 neutrons.
Fermium-246 has the mass number of 246 and it has 146 neutrons.
Uranium-235 has 143 neutrons and uranium-238 has 146 neutrons.
It is the isotope 238U.
Uranium has 92 electrons and protons.Uranium-234 has 142 neutrons, uranium-235 has 143 neutrons and uranium-238 has 146 neutrons.
Uranium, atomic number 92, has several isotopes, and 238U is just one of them. Remember that a nucleon is one of the particles that make up the nucleus of an atom, and that means a proton or a neutron. In the case of this isotope of uranium, it has the 92 protons we'd expect for uranium, and it has 146 neutrons in its nucleus along with those protons. That's 238 necleons in the nucleus if 238U. Wikipedia has more information on uranium and on the nucleon, and links are provided.
Uranium-238 has 146 neutrons.
Uranium-235 has 143 neutrons and uranium-238 has 146 neutrons.
It is the isotope 238U.
Uranium has 92 electrons and protons.Uranium-234 has 142 neutrons, uranium-235 has 143 neutrons and uranium-238 has 146 neutrons.
The number of neutrons varies with element and isotope. Hydrogen found in nature has 0, 1, or 2 neutrons. Uranium can have from 141 to 146.
Uranium, atomic number 92, has several isotopes, and 238U is just one of them. Remember that a nucleon is one of the particles that make up the nucleus of an atom, and that means a proton or a neutron. In the case of this isotope of uranium, it has the 92 protons we'd expect for uranium, and it has 146 neutrons in its nucleus along with those protons. That's 238 necleons in the nucleus if 238U. Wikipedia has more information on uranium and on the nucleon, and links are provided.
Uranium 238 has 92 protons and 146 neutrons.
You can't have that combination. Such an atom wouldn't be stable - not even for a tiny fraction of a second.The atomic mass is the sum of the atomic number (i.e., the number of protons), and the number of neutrons.
The difference between the mass number and the atomic number of an atom tells you how many neutrons the atom contains. For example, Plutonium 239 is element number 93. If you take away 93 from 239 you have 146 left. That tells you that Plutonium 239 has 146 neutrons. That fact creates nuclear explosions!
If you are thinking of isotopes, which are naturally occurring atomic structures that vary in the number of neutrons atom to atom. ex Carbon 12 13 14. But otherwise lots of atomic structures contain more neutrons than protons or electrons. Uranium for example 92 protons 146 neutrons
Uranium-238 has 146 neutrons.
how many particles are found in the nucleus of a uranium atom? 92 protons and x neutrons; the number of the neutrons is dependent of the isotope atomic mass. Also 92 electrons.
146 neutrons.