16 protons
16 neutrons
16 electrons
The most stable isotope of sulfur (S-32) has 16 electrons, 16 protons and 16 neutrons.
The numbers of protons and electrons are always 16 each. The numbers of neutrons vary with the isotope, but for the most common one, sulfur-32, the number of neutrons is also 16.
Sulfur has 16 protons and electrons and 16-20 neutrons, depending on the isotope.
An atom of sulfur has 16 protons and 16 electrons. Depending on the isotope, it can have anywhere from 16 to 20 neutrons.
16,9,16
19 neutrons 16 protons and electrons
The isotope sulfur-25 doesn't exist.
A sulfer atom has: 16 electrons, 16 protons and 16 neutrons but sulfer ions and isotopes do exist where this is different
Sulfur has... Protons: 16 (just like its atomic number) Neutrons: 16 Electrons: 16
An atom of sulfur has 16 protons and 16 electrons. Depending on the isotope, it can have anywhere from 16 to 20 neutrons.
16 protons, and if it isn't an ion ("isn't an ion" means that it has no electric charge), it has 16 electrons. on average, sulfur has 16.065 neutrons, but that's averaged out, so it's a weird number. let's just say most sulfur has 16 neutrons.
16,9,16
16 protons16 neutrons16 electrons
19 neutrons 16 protons and electrons
The isotope sulfur-25 doesn't exist.
The isotope sulfur-25 doesn't exist.
16 electrons in the neutral atom. Sulfur -32 is an isotope containing 32 protons and neutrons Sulfur has an atomic number of 16, which is the number of protons therefore sulfur-32 has 16 neutrons
Sulfur has 16 protons and supposedly also 16 neutrons however there will almost certainly be other isotopes with more or less neutrons
A sulfer atom has: 16 electrons, 16 protons and 16 neutrons but sulfer ions and isotopes do exist where this is different
There are 16 protons, 16 neutrons and 16 electrons in a Sulfur atom. *note it's atomic number- this is the number of protons in an atom of an element. There must be the same number of electrons to balance the charge. The atomic weight minus the number of protons gives you the number of neutrons