The ratio of a proton's rest mass to an electron's rest mass is 1836.15267247:1. For more information, follow the link below.
An alpha particle has approximately 4 times the mass of a proton.
A hydrogen atom has one proton and one electron. The proton is located in the nucleus, while the electron orbits around the nucleus. This balance of one proton and one electron gives hydrogen its neutral charge.
One electron. This balances out hydrogen's one proton.
There are 3 kinds of Sub-Atomic particles. These are Proton, Electron, Neutron.
your mom is an electron and i am her proton we keep eachother going
The mass of an electron is approximately 1⁄1836 of a proton. Thus as hydrogen is made of one proton and one electron, hydrogen is 1837 times heavier than an electron.
I believe it is reversed with a electron being smaller its mass is 1/1840 or 0.05% of a proton's. In fact the mass is so small we ignore it in calculation in stiochiometry. See here: http://www.physicsforums.com/archive/index.php/t-72615.html
No. A proton is many times more massive than an electron.
No. A proton is many times more massive than an electron.
Yes. A protons is many times more massive than an electron.
A proton is approximately 1836 times more massive than an electron.
A proton. A proton has a mass of 1 a.m.u. while an electron has a mass of 1/1840 a.m.u.
Absolutely; a proton weighs approximately 2000 times more than an electron.
1836 times the mass of an electronSo how do you calculate '1836 times the mass of a proton' ?Mass of proton = 1.673 x 10-27 or (10 to the power of negative 27)Mass of electron = 9.109 x 10-31 or (10 to the power of negative 31)Simply by dividing the largest mass (of protons) by the smallest mass (electrons):(1.67262 . 10-27) / (9.10939 . 10-31) = [1.67262 /9.10939] . [10(-27)-(-31)] =0.1836 . 10+4 = 1836
An alpha particle has approximately 4 times the mass of a proton.
The electric charges of the proton and electron are equal in magnitude (size, strength), and opposite in sign.
In mass, about 1836. In size... we're getting into a grey area here.