Boron (symbol B, atom number 5) is build up with:
5 protons, 5 electrons and 5 or 6 neutrons, depending on the mass number of the two possible isotopes: B-(10) has 5 neutrons and B-(11) has 6 of them respectively.
How is this a question.
A boron atom has 5 electrons in its electron cloud. Boron has an atomic number of 5, meaning it has 5 protons and normally 5 electrons to balance the positive charge of the protons.
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.
The nucleus of a boron atom contains 5 protons and typically 6 neutrons, giving it an atomic number of 5 and a mass number of 11. This configuration reflects boron's position in the periodic table, where it is represented by the symbol "B." The protons determine the element's identity, while the neutrons contribute to its mass and stability.
8 protons 8 elentrons 8 neutrons in 8O16
Boron-12 has 5 protons and 7 neutrons.
Boron has 5 neutrons and 5 protons for its most common isotope
Boron has 5 protons and 5 electrons Boron has two stable isotopes, one with 5 neutrons and 6 neutrons.
5 protons, 5 electrons and 6 neutrons :)
a regular boron atom (5B11 isotope) has six neutrons and five protons
5 electrons. 5 protons. 5/6 neutrons.
Boron has 5 neutrons and 5 protons for its most common isotope
5 Protons, 6 Neutrons. For future reference, the protons is the atomic number (right above the element symbol) To get the neutrons you subtract the atomic mass (underneath the symbol) by the number of protons. You have to round this number.
Boron-11 has 5 protons and 6 neutrons. This is because each element has a specific number of protons in its atoms that never changes. Boron atoms always have 5 protons. And when the number of protons (5) is subtracted from the mass number (11), the result is the number of neutrons (6).
Boron has 2 isotopes and both are stable thus, depending on the isotope, an atom of Boron could have 5 or 6 neutrons in it nucleus. 10B has 5 neutrons (and 5 protons) 11B has 6 neutrons (and 5 protons) As about about 80% of all boron is 11B, most Boron atoms will be found to have 6 neutrons.
The number of protons in an element is its atomic number. Boron's atomic number is 5 - ergo, there are 5 protons. The number of neutrons in an element is the difference between the atomic mass and the atomic number of an element. boron's atomic mass is 11. Therefore, 11 - 5 = 6. There are 6 neutrons in boron. In conclusion, there are 6 neutrons and 5 protons in boron.
Manganese: 25 protons, 30 neutrons, 25 electrons. Magnesium: 12 protons, 12 neutrons, 12 electrons. Argon: 18 protons, 22 neutrons, 18 electrons. Potassium: 19 protons, 20 neutrons, 19 electrons. Gold: 79 protons, 118 neutrons, 79 electrons. Hydrogen: 1 proton, 0 neutrons, 1 electron. Fluorine: 9 protons, 10 neutrons, 9 electrons. Silicon: 14 protons, 14 neutrons, 14 electrons. Boron: 5 protons, 6 neutrons, 5 electrons. Bromine: 35 protons, 45 neutrons, 35 electrons.