No it is on the inside
we can not add neutron
A neutron, although this is not always the case as there are hydrogen atoms with neutrons, but hydrogen atoms are the only one which are able to not have a neutron.
An electron has a mass of 1/1840 of an atomic mass unit, carries a charge of -1 and is found in one of a series of energy levels outside the nucleus of an atom. A neutron has a mass of 1 a.m.u., carries no charge and is found in the nucleus of atoms.
Most hydrogen atoms don't contain any neutrons. Deuterium atoms are hydrogen atoms with one neutron each, and tritium atoms are hydrogen atoms with two neutrons each, but most hydrogen atoms are protium atoms, with no neutrons at all. All other atoms in the universe except protium contain at least one neutron each.
The neutron has no charge. The proton is + and the electrons is -
Electron
Everything in universe is made of atoms, atoms has a nucleus which includes proton and neutron and with electron circling outside the nucleus.
we can not add neutron
The neutron star hasn't atoms.
Proton and neutron.
They are neutral.
Neutron
Atoms consist of electron(s), proton(s), and neutron(s), with the exception of hydrogen-1, which doesn't have any neutron.
Since a neutron has mass, adding a neutron to an atomic nucleus increases the atom's mass.
yes they are what makes up the atom
There are three commonly referred to subatomic particles in an atom. The two that are in the atom's nucleus are the proton and the neutron. The one that zips around outside of the nucleus is the electron.
Adding a neutron to an atom's nucleus increases the atom's mass by the mass of the neutron itself. Neutrons are more massive than protons, so adding a neutron will increase the atom's total mass without changing its charge.