Only uranium has 92 protons; each chemical element (natural or artificial) has a different number of protons.
92
Protons of all chemical elements are similar. All the isotopes of uranium have 92 protons.
Protons, neutrons and electrons - as in all the other chemical elements.
These elements are found after uranium.
Synthetic elements are found in the group of transuranium elements, which are elements with atomic numbers higher than uranium (92) on the periodic table. These elements are artificially created in a laboratory through nuclear reactions and have unstable nuclei.
All the synthetic elements on the Periodic Table appear after Uranium (atomic no. 92). These are the only synthetic elements.
The element with the largest amount of protons that is not man-made is uranium, with 92 protons. All naturally occurring elements with more protons than uranium are only found in laboratories as synthetic elements.
92
Elements with more than 92 protons are called Transuranic elements.
Protons of all chemical elements are similar. All the isotopes of uranium have 92 protons.
Elements past 92 are considered transuranium elements, which are all synthetic and are created artificially in laboratories. These elements do not occur naturally on Earth.
92 protonsAll the isotopes of uranium has 92 protons.
At present there are more than 50 elements in the world. There are 92 natural and 115 total when we add the synthetic elements.
radioactive.
Transuranic.
Yes. All elements classified after Element Atomic Number 92 (Uranium) (id est transuranium) are synthesised elements and can not be found naturally. They are also all radioactive, although this is the case for elements from elements 84 onwards.
There are 118 known elements, not 100 types of atoms. Elements are made up of atoms with specific numbers of protons in the nucleus. The first 92 elements occur naturally, with the rest being synthetic and created in laboratories.