The atom with an atomic number of 1 is Hydrogen. Hydrogen only has one electron and is very unstable because it is very close to the nucleus and has an incomplete valence shell
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Yes but only if there are no neutrons, such as in hydrogen (atomic number=1, relative Atomic Mass-1)
The number of Protons in an atom, so Hydrogen with 1 proton has the atomic number 1.
Sodium is a metal element. Atomic number of it is 1.
Atomic number= number of protons. Hydrogen atomic number=1
The atomic number tells how many protons are in the atom, and the atomic mass tells how many neutrons and protons are in the atom together. Like Oxygen has an atomic number of 8. It also has 8 protons. It's atomic mass is 16. It also has 16 neutrons and protons. Helium's atomic number is 1. It only has 1 proton. It's atomic mass is 1 because it doesn't have any neutrons.
The atomic number equals the number of protons in an atom, as well as the number of electrons in a stable, electrically neutral atom, it represents the identity of an element ,the simplest form of matter.
The atomic number of an atom is the number of protons in that atom. For example, the atomic number of hydrogen is 1 because one hydrogen atom have one proton.
Hydrogen(H) is the smallest atom that we know of. Its atomic number is 1.
The atomic number is the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom, while the mass number is the sum of the number of protons and the number of neutrons in the nucleus. Only one stable isotope, hydrogen-1, contains no neutrons in its nucleus, so that its atomic number and mass number are both 1. All stable atoms of all other isotopes contain neutrons and therefore will have a mass number larger than their atomic numbers.
Atomic Number :- atomic number of an element is the number of protons present in the nucleus of the atom. (since atoms are electrically neutral the number of protons in an atom is equal to the number of electrons in an atom) Atomic Mass :- atomic mass of an element is the number which tells us how many times an atom of that element is heavier than an atom of hydrogen (whose atomic weight is taken as unity [1])
The atomic number of hydrogen is 1, which means that a hydrogen atom has one proton in its nucleus.
Yes but only if there are no neutrons, such as in hydrogen (atomic number=1, relative Atomic Mass-1)
The atomic number of an atom is its number of protons. For instance, a hydrogen atom has an atomic number of one, meaning there is one proton in one hydrogen atom. Also, as there are the same number of protons as there are electrons in a neutral atom, the atomic number can also be thought of as the number of electrons in an atom, as long as the atom's neutral.
The number of protons in a atom is equivalent to its atomic number. Hydrogen's atomic number is 1, there fore it has 1 proton. Coppers atomic number is 29 so it has a proton count of 29. And so on.
Only if the atom is hydrogen-1! The mass number of the atom is equal to the sum of the numbers of protons, which is the same as the atomic number, plus the number of neutrons. The only non-radioactive atom without neutrons is hydrogen-1.
Hydrogen!
The number of electrons it has. For example Hydrogen has atomic number of 1 so it has 1 electron round it.