Depending on the level you look at:
or
Tritium, or Hydrogen 3, has an atomic mass of 3.016.
The three main parts to an atom would be Protons, Electrons and Neutrons. Then you have sub-atomic particles, Sub - Neutrons, so on so forth
H-3 (a more correct writing is 3H) is a radioactive natural isotope of hydrogen, also called tritium. Tritium has in the atomic nucleus 1 proton and 2 neutrons.
The mass difference between Helium-3 (3He) and Tritium (3H) is approximately 2 atomic mass units (amu). This is because Tritium has two neutrons in its nucleus, making it heavier than Helium-3.
Hydrogen is a non meta element. Atomic mass of it is 2.
Tritium, an isotope of hydrogen, or Helium-3 (which does not have a specific name).
Tritium, or Hydrogen 3, has an atomic mass of 3.016.
The three main parts to an atom would be Protons, Electrons and Neutrons. Then you have sub-atomic particles, Sub - Neutrons, so on so forth
The three main parts to an atom would be Protons, Electrons and Neutrons. Then you have sub-atomic particles, Sub - Neutrons, so on so forth
H-3 (a more correct writing is 3H) is a radioactive natural isotope of hydrogen, also called tritium. Tritium has in the atomic nucleus 1 proton and 2 neutrons.
The mass difference between Helium-3 (3He) and Tritium (3H) is approximately 2 atomic mass units (amu). This is because Tritium has two neutrons in its nucleus, making it heavier than Helium-3.
Hydrogen is a non meta element. Atomic mass of it is 2.
Tritium (Hydrogen-3, H3, T) has 1 Proton, 2 Neutrons, and 1 Electron.
The atomic bomb, nuclear fusion, helium 3, tritium, and that's about all i know
4.472 g/cm-3 as a solid 4.24 g/cm-3 as a liquid
To find the mass defect, subtract the atomic mass of tritium (3.016049) from the sum of the masses of the individual particles (3 protons and 2 neutrons). To find the binding energy, use Einstein's equation E=mc^2, where m is the mass defect calculated earlier.
1 proton 1 electron 2 neutrons mass = 3 amu