To determine the number of neutrons in an element, you subtract the atomic number (number of protons) from the Atomic Mass (rounded to the nearest whole number). For example, carbon (atomic number 6, atomic mass ~12) has 6 neutrons (12 - 6 = 6). If you provide the specific elements you're interested in, I can give you their neutron counts.
117
That would depend on the isotope of Gallium. Elements can have many different isotopes, which are alternate forms of an element which contain the same number of protons, but a different number of neutrons. Gallium has two primary isotopes, one which has 38 neutrons, and another which has 40 neutrons.
117 neutrons in Pt-195 isotope.
Carbon 13 has 7 neutrons.
Gold (the natural isotope 197Au) contain 79 protons, 118 neutrons and 79 electrons.
117
Plutonium-239 has 145 neutrons.
no the proton and the neutron are in a atom if there are so many protons it will over power the neutron if there are to many neutrons it will over power the proton neutrons and protons must be equal for the atom to be stable.
That would depend on the isotope of Gallium. Elements can have many different isotopes, which are alternate forms of an element which contain the same number of protons, but a different number of neutrons. Gallium has two primary isotopes, one which has 38 neutrons, and another which has 40 neutrons.
117 neutrons in Pt-195 isotope.
Carbon 13 has 7 neutrons.
Oxygen=8 Bromine=45 Helium=2 Argon=22 Manganese=30 Silicone=14
It would depend on which isotope of which element. Different elements and isotopes of those elements do not have the same number of neutrons. Some have none, some have many.
Gold (the natural isotope 197Au) contain 79 protons, 118 neutrons and 79 electrons.
It would depend on which isotope of which element. Different elements and isotopes of those elements do not have the same number of neutrons. Some have none, some have many.
because the protons and electrons HAVE to cancel out each other and ive knowtest that normally, there are around 1/2 as many neutrons then protons.
Each atom has a unique combination of protons, neutrons, and electrons.