It is a radioactive scandium isotope - 43Sc with 21 electrons and protons, and 22 neutrons.
Boron is an atom or element, and it contains protons, electrons, and neutrons.
Manganese has 25 protons, 25 electrons and 30 neutrons.
Elements are determined by their number of protons. Nitrogen has 7 protons but usually 7 neutrons as well. What you have here is a nitrogen isotope, an element with more or less neutrons than there are protons. Specifically, this is Nitrogen-15.
In a regular sample of the element of gold, meaning no change done to it, then there will be 79 protons and 118 neutrons
The element is krypton as it has 36 protons and the isotope is 36Kr86.
Boron is an atom or element, and it contains protons, electrons, and neutrons.
Manganese has 25 protons, 25 electrons and 30 neutrons.
Protons, Neutrons, and Electrons
Elements are determined by their number of protons. Nitrogen has 7 protons but usually 7 neutrons as well. What you have here is a nitrogen isotope, an element with more or less neutrons than there are protons. Specifically, this is Nitrogen-15.
Yes, and in order to find the Number of Neutrons, subtract Atomic Mass from Number Of Protons, the result will be the Number of Neutrons for that atom *No. Of Neutron=Atomic Mass - Number Of Protons
Number of protons = Number of electrons = Atomic number Number of neutrons = Atomic number - Number of protons
Thorium (232Th) has 90 protons, 9o electrons and 142 neutrons.
In a regular sample of the element of gold, meaning no change done to it, then there will be 79 protons and 118 neutrons
An atom contain protons, neutrons and electrons; protons and neutrons contain quarks and gluons.
The element is krypton as it has 36 protons and the isotope is 36Kr86.
The element is Neon and the isotope is 10Ne19
A silicon-28 atom has 14 protons, 14 neutrons, and 14 electrons. The number of protons determines the element (silicon in this case), the sum of protons and neutrons gives the atomic mass of the isotope (28 in this case), and the number of electrons balances the charge to make the atom electrically neutral.