Manganese (the natural isotope 55Mn) has 25 protons and 30 neutrons.
Manganese has 25 protons, 25 electrons and 30 neutrons.
Zinc has 30 electrons, 30 protons and 34 neutrons.
The number of neutrons in the nucleus of an atom varies for each isotope of the element. Atomic number 25 means the atom contains 25 Protons, and it is the element Manganese (Mn). Manganese has 4 isotopes 52Mn, 53Mn, 54Mn & 55Mn. Take the number of protons (always 25 with Mn) from the isotope number and you will have the number of Neutrons in the nucleus. eg 55Mn will have 30 Neutrons.
30 protons defines the atomic number. It matters not how many neutrons there are. The atomic number is 30, and the element is Zn (zinc).
30 protons means element 30 from the periodic table, which is Zinc. Although it usually doesn't have 30 neutrons, and I doubt that would be a stable isotope. Stable zinc isotopes have 34 and 36 neutrons.
Manganese has 25 protons, 25 electrons and 30 neutrons.
Yes, 25 protons and 30 neutrons form the nucleus of Manganese's most stable isotope.
Manganese is a metal element. Atomic mass number of it is 55.
The element comes with 30 neutrons is iron. It also has 26 protons.
Manganese has 25 protons, 25 electrons and 30 neutrons.
Manganese has 25 protons and electrons and 30 neutrons.
Zinc has 30 electrons, 30 protons and 34 neutrons.
The number of neutrons in the nucleus of an atom varies for each isotope of the element. Atomic number 25 means the atom contains 25 Protons, and it is the element Manganese (Mn). Manganese has 4 isotopes 52Mn, 53Mn, 54Mn & 55Mn. Take the number of protons (always 25 with Mn) from the isotope number and you will have the number of Neutrons in the nucleus. eg 55Mn will have 30 Neutrons.
25 protons 25 electrons normally 30 neutrons but it can vary between 21 and 40.
30 protons defines the atomic number. It matters not how many neutrons there are. The atomic number is 30, and the element is Zn (zinc).
30 protons means element 30 from the periodic table, which is Zinc. Although it usually doesn't have 30 neutrons, and I doubt that would be a stable isotope. Stable zinc isotopes have 34 and 36 neutrons.
There are a variety of isotopes that have 30 neutrons. It isn't the number of neutrons that determines an element, but the number of protons. Electrons generally balance the number of protons.