No r u crazy it has a mass of 2 times your weight
A proton. A proton has a mass of 1 a.m.u. while an electron has a mass of 1/1840 a.m.u.
No two subatomic particles have the exact same mass. The proton and the neutron, however, come close. Neutrons are heavier than protons by only 2.3 X 10-30 kg. (Neutron: 1.674927351 x 10-27, Proton: 1.672621777 x 10-27)
The mass of a proton is approximately 1.67*10-27 kg. The mass of an electron is approximately 9.11*10-31 kg. 1.67*10-27 kg / 9.11*10-31 kg = 1833 A proton is about 1833 times heavier than an electron.
No. The mass of a neutron is far, far, far greater than the mass of an electron. In fact, the mass of a neutron is approximately about 1840 times greater than the mass of an electron. The particle that has exactly the same mass as an electron is its antiparticle, the positron.
No; the mass of proton is similar to the mass of neutrons.
A proton. A proton has a mass of 1 a.m.u. while an electron has a mass of 1/1840 a.m.u.
The mass number of a neutron is 1, as it contains one unit of mass. The mass number of a proton is also 1, as it contains one unit of mass. In hydrogen, the nucleus usually consists of one proton, so the mass number of a proton in hydrogen is 1.
A proton has a mass of 1 AMU (one atomic mass unit)
If a proton would be 1, an electron would be 0.000544. An electron is 1,836 times lighter than a proton. A neutron would be 1.001 as a proton is 99.86% the mass of a neutron
No, the mass of an electron is roughly 1/1836 the mass of a proton.
A particle that has a mass of 1 and a charge of 1 plus is a proton.
1 / mass of a proton = avogadro's number 1 / mass of a proton = avogadro's number
Mass ratio proton (neutron)/electron: 1 836
Mass ratio proton (neutron)/electron: 1 836
Mass ratio proton (neutron)/electron: 1 836
A proton's mass is approximately 1 atomic mass unit, roughly 1.6726 x 10^-27 kilograms.
The mass of a proton and neutron are pretty close. So the ratio will be roughly 1 to 1 (or 1:1). The neutron is heavier and if memory serves it is exactly the mass of an electron heavier than a proton. Note it takes around 1820 electron to equal the mass of one proton.