Francium has the largest nucleus in the hydrogen group; it's always the atom in the lowest row (highest period number) of any column in a normal Periodic Table that has the largest nucleus in that column.
In a Hydrogen nucleus there is a proton. Hydrogen is the only element to not have a neutron in it's nucleus.
No, a hydrogen atom does not have a neutron in its nucleus. A hydrogen atom consists of only one proton in its nucleus.
Without a nucleus it can not be either an atom or hydrogen.
No electrons are in the nucleus. the nucleus consists of a proton for normal hydrogen, a proton and neutron for deuterium and a proton and two neutrons for tritium. Deuterium and tritium are isotopes of hydrogen.
The hydrogen nucleus has a single proton. The helium nucleus has two protons and one or two neutrons.
The nucleus of hydrogen has 1 proton, whereas that of helium has 2 protons.
The nucleus of hydrogen has 1 proton, whereas that of helium has 2 protons.
Hydrogen typically has only a proton in its nucleus.
The mass of a hydrogen nucleus is approximately 1 atomic mass unit.
Hydrogen is not in a group with other families. It actually is in group 1 of the Periodic Table. It is a diatomic atom when it combines with other elements.
hydrogen
Hydrogen has a much higher ionization energy than elements in Group 1 because it has a greater effective nuclear charge relative to its size. While Group 1 elements have a single valence electron that is relatively far from the nucleus, resulting in lower ionization energies, hydrogen has only one electron in the first energy level, which is closer to the nucleus. This proximity leads to a stronger attraction between the electron and the positively charged nucleus, making it more difficult to remove the electron. Additionally, hydrogen is a non-metal, whereas Group 1 elements are metals, further influencing their ionization energy characteristics.