Platinum is a rare element too. Atomic number of platinum is 78.
When it has no charge there are 78.the number of electrons is always equal to the number of protons, both are the atomic number. the atomic number of platinum is 78, so 78 electrons and 78 protons too.
No. It would be platinum if it has 78 protons.
depends on isotope.For the most common isotope Platinum-195 (33.5%), there are the following fermions:electrons = 78protons = 78neutrons = 117quarks (inside protons & neutrons) = 585Total = 858Also at any given moment there are an indeterminate number of bosons being interchanged between these 858 fermions to hold the atom together with the electromagnetic, weak, and strong forces:photons - electromagneticW & Z bosons - weakmesons - strong (between protons and neutrons)gluons - strong (between quarks)So even for an atom of one known isotope, the exact number of subatomic particles in it is unknown and cannot be known.
Platinum atom has 78 protons and electrons; the number of neutrons is variable and depends on the atomic mass of the isotope (atomic mass of the isotope - atomic number = number of neutrons). The stable isotopes have 114, 116, 117, 118, or 120 neutrons.
78 protons, 78 electrons and 119 neutrons
The subscript of platinum-195 is 78, which represents the atomic number of platinum (the number of protons in its nucleus). The superscript is 195, which represents the mass number of the isotope (the total number of protons and neutrons in its nucleus).
The superscript in platinum-95 (Pt-95) refers to the atomic number of the element, which is 78 (number of protons). The subscript represents the atomic mass of the isotope, which is the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of the atom.
When it has no charge there are 78.the number of electrons is always equal to the number of protons, both are the atomic number. the atomic number of platinum is 78, so 78 electrons and 78 protons too.
No. It would be platinum if it has 78 protons.
depends on isotope.For the most common isotope Platinum-195 (33.5%), there are the following fermions:electrons = 78protons = 78neutrons = 117quarks (inside protons & neutrons) = 585Total = 858Also at any given moment there are an indeterminate number of bosons being interchanged between these 858 fermions to hold the atom together with the electromagnetic, weak, and strong forces:photons - electromagneticW & Z bosons - weakmesons - strong (between protons and neutrons)gluons - strong (between quarks)So even for an atom of one known isotope, the exact number of subatomic particles in it is unknown and cannot be known.
The only element with 78 protons is platinum (Pt).
One mole of platinum contains Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23) of atoms. Since each platinum atom has 78 protons, one mole of platinum contains 78 times Avogadro's number, which equals 4.686 x 10^25 protons.
Platinum atom has 78 protons and electrons; the number of neutrons is variable and depends on the atomic mass of the isotope (atomic mass of the isotope - atomic number = number of neutrons). The stable isotopes have 114, 116, 117, 118, or 120 neutrons.
All isotopes/ions of Platinum have the same number of protons: 78. If it had a different number of protons, then it would be a completely different element. The only subatomic particles that change in an atom are the electrons and neutrons. The most common isotope of Platinum is 195Pt with 117 neutrons.
78 protons, 78 electrons and 119 neutrons
An atom of platinum (Pt) has 78 protons.
The atomic number of platinum is 78, which means it has 78 protons in its nucleus. The atomic mass of platinum is approximately 195.08 g/mol, which is an average of the different isotopes of platinum found in nature.