Boron-11 is an isotope. The atomic number of Boron is 5 which means it has 5 protons, (if there were more or less protons the element wouldn't be boron). the isotope number (11) is the number of protons plus neutrons. to find out the number of neutrons you would take take the isotope and subtract it by number of protons (11-5) which yields 6. To find the isotope add the number of protons to the number of neutrons.
it has 5 protons and 5 neutrons.
Protons and neutrons; these particles contain quarks and gluons.
nucleus....contains protons & neutrons
Protons, neutrons, and electrons are the three main particles found in a neutral atom. Protons have a positive charge, neutrons have no charge, and electrons have a negative charge.
Protons and neutrons are subatomic particles that are responsible for most of an atom's mass. Protons have a positive charge, neutrons are neutral, and both are found in the nucleus of an atom. Electrons, which have a much smaller mass, orbit around the nucleus.
Boron 10: 5 protons, 5 neutrons, 5 electrons Boron 11: 5 protons, 6 neutrons, 5 electrons
5 electrons. 5 protons. 5/6 neutrons.
Boron-11 has 5 protons and 6 neutrons. This is because each element has a specific number of protons in its atoms that never changes. Boron atoms always have 5 protons. And when the number of protons (5) is subtracted from the mass number (11), the result is the number of neutrons (6).
4 protons and about 5 neutrons
Boron has 5 electrons and protons; the number of neutrons is specific for each isotope. Number of neutrons in a boron isotope = Mass number - 5
Boron (symbol B, atom number 5) is build up with:5 protons, 5 electrons and 5 or 6 neutrons, depending on the mass number of the two possible isotopes: B-(10) has 5 neutrons and B-(11) has 6 of them respectively.
Boron has 5 neutrons and 5 protons for its most common isotope
Boron has 5 protons and 5 electrons Boron has two stable isotopes, one with 5 neutrons and 6 neutrons.
Beryllium has 4 protons, 5 neutrons and 4 electrons.
Boron has 5 neutrons and 5 protons for its most common isotope
There would be 6 protons and 5 neutrons. Such isotope does not exist though.
The isotope (^{10}\text{B}) (Boron-10) has a mass number of 10, which means it contains a total of 10 protons and neutrons combined. Since Boron (B) has an atomic number of 5, it has 5 protons. Therefore, the number of neutrons can be calculated as 10 (mass number) - 5 (protons) = 5 neutrons. Thus, (^{10}\text{B}) has 5 protons and 5 neutrons.