This is called also protium and contain 1 proton and 1 electron.
Mass of hydrogen atom = 1 amu Mass of ununoctium atom = 294 amu So ratio = 1 : 294
Yes but only if there are no neutrons, such as in hydrogen (atomic number=1, relative Atomic Mass-1)
Of the common sub-atomic particles, both the proton and the neutron have mass numbers of 1.
The atomic number of deuterium (2H) is 1, as it has one proton in its nucleus. The mass number of deuterium is 2, which is the sum of the protons and neutrons in its nucleus (1 proton + 1 neutron = mass number of 2).
Deuteriums emision spectrum either is like hydrogen http://chemed.chem.purdue.edu/genchem/topicreview/bp/ch6/bohr.html or like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Deuterium_lamp_1.png
The mass number of the most common hydrogen isotope, Hydrogen-1, is one
The number of neutrons in an atom can be calculated by subtracting the atomic number (number of protons) from the mass number. For hydrogen, the atomic number is 1 and the mass number is also 1. Therefore, the number of neutrons in hydrogen is 1 (mass number - atomic number = 1 - 1 = 0 neutrons).
all atoms have different masses Mass of an atom is due to protons and neutrons present in an atom and number of proton is something that distinguish between atoms, therefore mass of hydrogen is different to the mass number of oxygen, hydrogen's mass is 1 as it has only 1 proton and no neutrons, and oxygen mass's is 16 as it has 8 protons and 8 neutrons.
Mass of hydrogen atom = 1 amu Mass of ununoctium atom = 294 amu So ratio = 1 : 294
Yes but only if there are no neutrons, such as in hydrogen (atomic number=1, relative Atomic Mass-1)
Only if the atom is hydrogen-1! The mass number of the atom is equal to the sum of the numbers of protons, which is the same as the atomic number, plus the number of neutrons. The only non-radioactive atom without neutrons is hydrogen-1.
Of the common sub-atomic particles, both the proton and the neutron have mass numbers of 1.
The mass of a hydrogen atom is 1.66 x 10^(-27) kg. Further, any atomic weight can be derived by dividing its molar mass by Avogardro's number.
No, a hydrogen atom with a mass of 3 is not an isotope of hydrogen. Hydrogen isotopes include protium (mass 1), deuterium (mass 2), and tritium (mass 3).
The atomic number of deuterium (2H) is 1, as it has one proton in its nucleus. The mass number of deuterium is 2, which is the sum of the protons and neutrons in its nucleus (1 proton + 1 neutron = mass number of 2).
an oxygen and a hydrogen atom do not weight the same
Deuteriums emision spectrum either is like hydrogen http://chemed.chem.purdue.edu/genchem/topicreview/bp/ch6/bohr.html or like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Deuterium_lamp_1.png