people don't invent atoms or elements, but they do get discovered. check answers.com for this.
Yes it is. It is an isotope of the atom / element tin.
Archealogist and scientist who study tin dont know who discovered it so no one knows
Tin, Sn, atom no. 50, has 50 protons in its nucleus.
Tellurium is more stable than tin due to the fact that tellurium is closer to having a stable number of electrons on its outer shell than tellurium.
people don't invent atoms or elements, but they do get discovered. check answers.com for this.
where was the Tin discovered?
Yes it is. It is an isotope of the atom / element tin.
Archealogist and scientist who study tin dont know who discovered it so no one knows
chadwick discovered neutral atom
The charge on a tin atom that has lost four electrons is 4+.
yup
Tin itself is a neutral element and therefore neither a cation nor an anion. A single tin atom can form a cation by donating two or four of its electrons to more electronegative atoms. A single tin atom is not electronegative enough to form an anion, but together with oxygen atoms, a tin atom can form a polyatomic anion.
The nuclear atom was discovered by Ernest Rutherford. He did it with a gold foil experiment.
Tin's atomic number is 50. Thus, it has 50 protons per atom. The atom with 51 protons is antimony.
Tin, Sn, atom no. 50, has 50 protons in its nucleus.
i dont know actullly