You mean a charge of +1? That would mean that it has 106 protons. That element is seaborgium. The Atomic Mass, however, can be calculated by a combination of protons and neutrons. 106+157=263. The particle you speak of, seaborgium 157, has an atomic mass of 263.
No. The mass number can be used, however, to determine the number of neutrons. Electrons can only be determined by knowing the atom's charge.
If the ion has a +1 charge and has 107 electrons, that means that it originally had 108 electrons, and therefore has 108 protons. The mass number is the sum of the protons and neutrons, 108 + 159, and therefore is equal to 267.
Mass number = number of protons + number of neutrons Number of electrons = number of protons = mass number of an isotope - number of neutrons
In a neutral atom of fluorine, there are 9 electrons. The number of neutrons varies with an isotope's mass number.
There are 16 protons, 16 neutrons and 16 electrons in a Sulfur atom. *note it's atomic number- this is the number of protons in an atom of an element. There must be the same number of electrons to balance the charge. The atomic weight minus the number of protons gives you the number of neutrons
266
An atom consists of protons (positive charge), neutrons (no charge), and electrons (negative charge). The atomic number is the number of protons. Furthermore, the mass number is the sum of the protons and neutrons.
Atomic number means number of protons present in an atom. Atomic number= number of protons. mass number = number of neutrons+ number of protons. So if you subtract the number of protons you get neutrons and if you subtract neutrons you get protons. mass number - protons= neutrons Mass number - neutrons = protons.
No. The mass number can be used, however, to determine the number of neutrons. Electrons can only be determined by knowing the atom's charge.
Mass, electric charge, and internal structure.
atomic mass = protons + neutronsprotons = atomic mass - neutrons = 18 - 8 = 10 protons (Neon)In ground state, protons = electrons = no charge-1 charge means gain of 1 e-, so number of electrons = 11 electrons
Atomic Number: This is the number of protons an element has. Answer: 26 Atomic Mass: Ignoring electrons, which are incredibly small and don't have much of an effect on the mass... This is the number of protons plus the number of neutrons Answer: 56 (26 protons + 30 neutrons) Net Charge: Protons are positive and electrons are negative. The net charge can be found by subtracting the number of electrons from the number of protons. 0 is neutral. Answer: +3 (26 protons - 23 electrons)
Learn that the atomic number means the number of protons. The mass number is the number of protons and the number of neutrons. So if we take the number of protons from the mass number then we get the number of neutrons that are present (mass umber - atomic number = number of neutrons). in this case 15 - 8 = 7. Since you dont mention there is any charge on the atom ill assume that its charge is neutral. For an atoms charge to be neutral then the positive charges from protons must equal the negative charges from electrons and vica versa. So for this to be the case with 8 protons then we must have 8 electrons.
If the ion has a +1 charge and has 107 electrons, that means that it originally had 108 electrons, and therefore has 108 protons. The mass number is the sum of the protons and neutrons, 108 + 159, and therefore is equal to 267.
you didnt specify whether the charge was positive or negative :(
protons and neutrons
Atomic Number: This is the number of protons an element has. Answer: 26 Atomic Mass: Ignoring electrons, which are incredibly small and don't have much of an effect on the mass... This is the number of protons plus the number of neutrons Answer: 56 (26 protons + 30 neutrons) Net Charge: Protons are positive and electrons are negative. The net charge can be found by subtracting the number of electrons from the number of protons. 0 is neutral. Answer: +3 (26 protons - 23 electrons).