The isotope (^{10}\text{B}) (Boron-10) has a mass number of 10, which means it contains a total of 10 protons and neutrons combined. Since Boron (B) has an atomic number of 5, it has 5 protons. Therefore, the number of neutrons can be calculated as 10 (mass number) - 5 (protons) = 5 neutrons. Thus, (^{10}\text{B}) has 5 protons and 5 neutrons.
6 protons, 6 neutrons
11 protons and 9 neutrons
Protons: 10 Neutrons: 10
Potassium-40 (K-40) has 19 protons and 21 neutrons.
7 protons, 7 neutrons and 7 electrons
Neutrons are completely separate from protons, so neutrons do not have any protons, and protons do not have any neutrons.
None -- all protons are protons, which are different from neutrons.
16 neutrons and 16 protons
there are 66 protons & 97 neutrons
18 protons 18 electrons 22 neutrons
77 protons, 115 neutrons.
Phosphorous has 15 protons and 16 neutrons.
Neon has 10 protons and 9 neutrons.
6 protons, 6 neutrons
11 protons and 9 neutrons
4 protons and about 5 neutrons
13 protons and 14 neutrons