Number of protons = Atomic number
Number of electrons = Atomic number minus the charge (if it is ion)
Number of neutrons = Mass number minus Atomic number
Look at the Periodic Table. Each element is assigned a number called the atomic number -- it is usually written in large on the periodic table. That number tells you the number of protons in the nucleus of each element. The atomic number is always the same as the number of protons. The number of protons in the nucleus uniquely identifies an element.
The number of electrons in an element can change. For a neutral atom (net charge of zero), the number of protons is exactly equal to the number of electrons. So the number of electrons is also the same as the atomic number.
However, it is possible to remove electrons and not change the identity of an element. These are called ions. The charge on the ion tells you the number of electrons -- the number of electrons is the atomic number minus the charge on the ion if it's an ion. If the charge is positive, subtract that number from the atomic number to get the number of electrons (with a positively charged ion, you will then have less electrons than protons).
If the charge is negative, subtract the charge (but note you are subtracting a negative number, which is the same as adding the magnitude of the charge to the atomic number (with a negatively charged ion, you with then have more electrons than protons).
The number of neutrons in an element can also vary, and if two atoms of the same element have different numbers of neutrons, then they are called isotopes. To figure out how many neutrons are in the nucleus, you must know the mass number. Note that you cannot determine the number of neutrons for an element, only for one isotope of that element -- so you have to know which isotope you are being asked about.
Usually, a specific isotope is written like this: silicon-30 or carbon-12 or aluminum-26. It can also be written like this though, when using the symbol for the element instead of its full name: 30Si or 12C or 26Al. The number is called the mass number, and the mass number is equal to the sum of the number of protons plus the number of neutrons.
So if you know the mass number and you know the atomic number (if you know the name of the element, that tells you the atomic number because each element has only one atomic number), to find the number of neutrons, subtract the mass number from the atomic number.
Here are some examples:
If the atom is neutral, then it will have 15 electrons to balance the 15 protons.
17 electrons. The number of protons and electrons is always the same.
In an atom of gold, there are 79 protons and 79 electrons. The number of neutrons for gold may vary by isotope.
In a neutral atom, the number of electrons is equal to the number of protons. So, in an atom with three protons, it would contain three electrons. The number of neutrons does not affect the charge or number of electrons in the atom.
The number of protons in an atom is equal to the number of electrons. Therefore, an atom with 8 protons will have 8 electrons.
If the atom is neutral, then it will have 15 electrons to balance the 15 protons.
2 protons 2 electrons 2 neutrons 2 protons 2 electrons 2 neutrons don't know
Neutrons = 10. Protons = 10. And electrons = 10.
9 protons and 10 neutrons in F-19 isotope.
Americium has 95 protons and electrons. Number of neutrons: Atomic Mass of an isotope - number of protons
The number of protons
False. The atom that has the same number of protons as it has electrons is a neutral atom.
In a neutral atom, the number of electrons is equal to the number of protons of the nucleus.
17 electrons. The number of protons and electrons is always the same.
not usually, a standard atom will contain the same amount of electrons and PROTONS, not neutrons
An atom of oxygen has 8 protons, 8 neutrons, and 8 electrons. The number of protons determines the element's identity and is equal to the atomic number, while the number of neutrons can vary, leading to different isotopes. The number of electrons is equal to the number of protons in a neutral atom.
In an atom of gold, there are 79 protons and 79 electrons. The number of neutrons for gold may vary by isotope.