All atoms of chemical elements contain protons, neutrons (excepting the isotope H-1)and electrons.
The natural isotopes of bromine are 79Br and 81Br.
For the list of all isotopes see the link below.
the chemical symbol is Br :)
The nuclear symbol of bromine is ^79Br, which represents an atom of bromine with an atomic mass of 79 and an atomic number of 35.
The hazard symbol for bromine is YOUR MAM
81Br is one of the stable isotopes of bromine.
It derive from the first 2 letters of the word "Bromine".
2He3
Symbols of nucldes doesn't contain symbols of subatomic particles. But: the atomic number is equal to the number of neutrons. Example: 235 92U (the fissile isotope of uranium) - 235 is the mass number (sum of protons and neutrons) - 92 is the number of protons and electrons
No, sodium is not a subatomic particle. Sodium is a chemical element with the symbol Na and atomic number 11. Subatomic particles are particles smaller than an atom, such as protons, neutrons, and electrons.
Bromine-79 has 44 neutrons and bromine-81 has 46 neutrons. All the isotopes of bromine has 35 protons.
Br is a chemical element symbol for bromine. It exists as neutral atoms in its most common form. An isotope would refer to different forms of bromine with varying numbers of neutrons, while an ion would indicate a charged species of bromine due to gaining or losing electrons.
subatomic particles are something that make an atom. There are six kind of subatomic particles. Matter = proton, neuton and electron. Antimatter = antiproton, antineuton and positron. There are three kinds of subatomic particles in every element except hydrogen, there is no neuton because it has only one proton. There are 95 subatomic particles in Zinc.(30 p, 30 e- and 35 n)
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.
the chemical symbol is Br :)
The nuclear symbol of bromine is ^79Br, which represents an atom of bromine with an atomic mass of 79 and an atomic number of 35.
No, carbon is not a subatomic particle. Carbon is an element, specifically a chemical element with the symbol "C" and atomic number 6, meaning it has 6 protons in its nucleus. Subatomic particles are particles that are smaller than atoms, such as protons, neutrons, and electrons.
Bromine vapor is chemically the same as bromine its just physically different so the symbol is still Br. :-)
The hazard symbol for bromine is YOUR MAM