29. Cu 1 is an ion where the Cu atom has lost an electron. Therefore, it would have the normal 29 neutrons.
In a neutral atom, there will be the same number of electrons as protons, with the number of protons being the same as the atomic number, 29. The number of neutrons it has depends on the specific isotope; however, the most common naturally occurring isotope is 63Cu, with 34 neutrons. See link below.
Hydrogen has 1 electron, (1 proton) and 0 neutrons.
Elements do NOT have any charge. Cu(65) has 29 protons with 36 neutrons, the same is in the '+1' ION of this element (Cu+1) which then has 1 electron less than the elemental form(29 electrons), thus 28 electrons. Important to know: IONS (with charge) are not ELEMENTS !
A hydrogen atom has 1 proton and 1 electron regardless of the isotope.Standard hydrogen(protium) has zero neutrons.The deuterium isotope has 1 neutron and the tritium (very radioactive) has 2 neutrons.
They differ from each other in the number of neutrons, and therefore also the mass. They will also have different stabilities (for example, some of them may be radioactive), but this is complicated.
34
Number of neutrons = Mass number - Atomic number = 63 - 29 = 34 neutrons
34 and 36 neutrons in Cu-63 and Cu-65 isotopes respectively
Two stable isotopes: Cu(63) 69% occurrance and Cu(65) 31%They have (63-29)= 34 and (65-29)= 36 neutrons respectively.
they are different isotopes of copper 1 has 2 more neutrons than the other
27 cu. ft. = 1 cu. yd.
1 proton, no neutrons
1 cu. ft. = 28.32 liters
In a neutral atom, there will be the same number of electrons as protons, with the number of protons being the same as the atomic number, 29. The number of neutrons it has depends on the specific isotope; however, the most common naturally occurring isotope is 63Cu, with 34 neutrons. See link below.
46656 cu in = 1 cu yd
The answer is 2000 cu mm, there are 1000 cu mm to 1 cu cm
1 cu ft = 0.037037 cu yeard