An electrically neutral atom has the same number of protons ( positive charged ) and electrons ( negatively charged ).
An electrically neutral atom has the same number of electrons as protons. Since protons have a positive change and electrons have a negative charge, when there is the same number of them, the charges cancel each other out. Example: Helium is neutral when it has 2 electrons, since it also has 2 protons.
The number of electrons can be determined if the overall charge and number of protons are known. If the charge of an atom is neutral, then how ever many protons it has it will also have that number of electrons.
Always the Atomic Number = Number of Protons If electrically neutral, Atomic Number = Number of Electrons = Number of Protons
An atom has no electrical charge because the negative charge of the electrons counteract the positive charge of the protons and the neutrons in the nucleus have a neutral charge. For example, Carbon has 6 electrons(-6 charge) and has 6 protons(+6 charge). Giving it an atomic weight of 12 and a charge of 0. The 6 neutrons do not change this charge, they keep it the same because they are neutral. (:
No. of protons is 7. No. of neutrons is atomic weight -no. of protons. In neutral atom no. of protons equals the number of electrons which would be 7 in this case. Refer to periodic table for more information.
Yes, in an electrically neutral atom or compound or mixture.
atomic number = number of protons = number of electrons (in a neutral atom)
An electrically neutral atom is one that has an equal number of protons and electrons.
All neutral atoms have the same number of protons and electrons as they are electrically neutral.
The number of electrons
An atom is neutral if the number of protons and the number of electrons it has are the same.
An atom has the same number of positive protons and negative electrons so the charges balance out to zero
You can only be sure of the number of electrons if the element is electrically neutral. If an element is electrically neutral, then the number of electrons is the same as the number of protons which is the atomic number of the element. For instance an electrically neutral atom of carbon, there are 6 electrons because there are 6 protons in a carbon atom.
Generally an atom contains similar number of electrons and protons. That is why an atom is neutral.
Because an electrically neutral atom has an equal number of protons and electrons.
Normally the number of protons and electrons are equal.
A "atom" which by definition is electrically neutral, has the same number of electrons as it has protons.