The isotope of bromine called 81-bromine.
Since the element you are describing has 35 electrons, it must also have 35 protons.
Therefore you end up with bromine which is the 35th element (since the amount of protons are equal to the elements number).
Adding 46 to 35 gives you the weight of the specific bromine isotope, since the weight of the element is also the name of the isotope.
It is also not radioactive.
Bromine has the atomic number 35, so it has 35 protons. To find the number of neutrons in Bromine-80, subtract the atomic number from the atomic mass: 80 (atomic mass) - 35 (protons) = 45 neutrons. Since it is a neutral atom, the number of protons and electrons are the same, so there are 35 electrons.
An atom of bromine-81 has 35 protons, 35 electrons, and 46 neutrons. This is because the atomic number of bromine is 35, which corresponds to the number of protons and electrons, and the atomic mass of bromine-81 is 81, which is the sum of protons and neutrons.
In a neutral atom of 243Am (Americium), there are 95 protons (which corresponds to its atomic number), approximately 148 neutrons (which can be calculated by subtracting the atomic number from the atomic mass), and 95 electrons (equal to the number of protons in a neutral atom).
Protons- 30 Electrons- 30 Neutrons- 35 Zn-65 means the atomic number plus the number of neutrons equals 65. Zinc always has 30 protons; therefore, it's atomic number is 30 and it has 30 protons and electrons. The remaining number is the neutrons: 65-30= 35
Neutrons are 'zero' charged. Protons are positively(+) charged. Electrons are negatively(-) charged. For any neutrally charged atom , the number of protons(+) equals the number of electrons(-); the charges balance. However, when an atom loses or gains electrons it becomes a charged species and is called an ION , not an atom. If the number of protons changes then it is a completely different element. Neutrons have no effect on the charge of an atom/ion, they only effect the atomic mass. Here are some examples. Hydrogen has one proton and one electrons ; charges balance. However the hydrogen ion has one proton and no electrons (H^+) Chlorine has two isotopes l different number of neutrons Chlorine - 35 , 17 protons , 18 neutrons and 17 electrons The Chloride(-35) ion has 17 protons , 18 neutrons and 18 electrons (35)Cl^-) , the chloride -35 ion Chlorine - 37, 17 protons , 20 neutrons and 17 electrons The Chloride(-37) ion has 17 protons , 20 neutrons, and 18 electrons (37)Cl^-) , the chloride - 37 ion. The Chloride(-37) ion has 17 protons, 20 neutrons and 18 electrons Notice , for the given element the number of protons remains the same, the different isotopes have different number of neutrons, and the ions have a different number of electrons.
The Bromine atom contains: 35 protons, 35 electrons, and 45 neutrons.
Bromine has the atomic number 35, so it has 35 protons. To find the number of neutrons in Bromine-80, subtract the atomic number from the atomic mass: 80 (atomic mass) - 35 (protons) = 45 neutrons. Since it is a neutral atom, the number of protons and electrons are the same, so there are 35 electrons.
An atom of bromine-81 has 35 protons, 35 electrons, and 46 neutrons. This is because the atomic number of bromine is 35, which corresponds to the number of protons and electrons, and the atomic mass of bromine-81 is 81, which is the sum of protons and neutrons.
In a neutral atom of 243Am (Americium), there are 95 protons (which corresponds to its atomic number), approximately 148 neutrons (which can be calculated by subtracting the atomic number from the atomic mass), and 95 electrons (equal to the number of protons in a neutral atom).
Bromine-80 has 35 protons, as all bromine atoms do. The number of neutrons can be calculated by subtracting the atomic number (35) from the atomic mass (80), giving 45 neutrons. In a neutral bromine-80 atom, there are also 35 electrons.
79? I'm pretty sure the atomic mass of Bromine is 80. Incase you were wrong, the Atomic mass = Number of protons + Neutrons, which is 80. The atomic number is 35, which is the number of protons. Protons = 35. So the No. of Neutrons = 80 ( protons & neutrons) - 35 (protons) = 45 ( No. of neutrons) and Finally for electrons = the number of protons which is 35.
35 (amu)
Zinc has 30 protons since its atomic number is 30. This also means that it has 30 electrons to balance the positive charge from the protons. The number of neutrons in an atom of zinc can vary based on the isotope, but a typical zinc atom has around 35 neutrons.
Protons- 30 Electrons- 30 Neutrons- 35 Zn-65 means the atomic number plus the number of neutrons equals 65. Zinc always has 30 protons; therefore, it's atomic number is 30 and it has 30 protons and electrons. The remaining number is the neutrons: 65-30= 35
An atom of bromine-82 has 35 protons, 35 electrons and 47 neutrons. All electrically neutral atoms of bromine have 35 electrons.
30 The atomic number is the number of protons
In a neutral atom, the number of electrons will be the same as the number of protons. This is because one positive proton will cancel out one negative electron; therefore, if the atom is neutral, it must have the same number of protons and electrons.The number of protons is also the same as the atomic number. For this example, Bromine, with the atomic number of 35, has 35 protons.Bromine:Atomic number- 35Number of protons- 35Number of electrons- 35The mass number is the sum of the atomic number (or number of protons/electrons) and the neutrons. For this example, we know the atomic number (35) + # neutrons = mass number (80). To figure out the number of neutrons, take the mass number and subtract the number of electrons/protons/atomic number. Mass number (80) - atomic number (35) = neutrons (45).