i have no clue sorry
The symbol used to represent a nucleus is "Au", which is a combination of the atomic symbol and mass number.
No the hydrogen nucleus is a proton. The helium nucleus is an alpha particle.
It is Lr, which is the chemical symbol for Lawrencium.
The symbol for a hydrogen-1 nucleus is ^1H, also known as protium. It consists of one proton and no neutrons.
The symbol for the nucleus of each isotope of uranium is U. Each isotope will have a different number of protons and neutrons, but they will all have the element symbol U as their nucleus.
For the no of proton "A" is used.
The term is nuclear notation or nuclear symbol. It is a shorthand way to represent the composition of an atomic nucleus, indicating the chemical element symbol, mass number, and atomic number of a particular nucleus.
92, the atomic number of U.
The alpha particle is a helium nucleus. Its symbol is 24He2+, meaning 2 protons, 2 neutrons, and no electrons.
The three subatomic particles found in the nucleus of an atom are protons, neutrons, and electrons. Protons have a positive charge, neutrons have no charge, and electrons have a negative charge. Together, they make up the structure of an atom.
This chemical element is neodymium (Nd).
Ra22688 = Rn22286 + (a)42+ (a)= an alpha particle, i can't do the symbol here