14 atoms of carbon.
If the element in question is carbon, it has 6 protons, whether it's 12C, 13C, 14C, or any of its other 12 known isotopes.
Carbon-14 (14C) has 6 protons and 8 neutrons in its nucleus, along with 6 electrons orbiting the nucleus in energy levels. The arrangement of subatomic particles in 14C follows the standard structure of a carbon atom.
The number of protons and neutrons (Mass Number) is 12
A "superscript" number before the symbol for the element - eg. 11C 12C 13C 14C Denotes the four isotopes of the element Carbon. The superscript number is a count of the total number of "nucleons" (protons and neutrons) in the atomic nucleus of the atom. If you subtract the elements "atomic number" (which is the number of Protons that element has) from the Isotope (superscript) number you get the number of Neutrons in that isotope. From this you will be able to deduce that isotopes of elements are caused by a variation in the number of neutrons in an atom of an element.
a superscript designating the number of nucleons is placed before the chemical symbol. Nucleons are either protons or neutrons. Example: Carbon (C) has 6 protons and 6 neutrons. Carbon-14 has 2 extra neutrons, and is designated 14C
The symbol for the radioactive isotope Carbon-14 is ^14C. The superscript 14 indicates the mass number of the isotope, which is the sum of protons and neutrons in the nucleus. The letter C represents the chemical element carbon.
It is: 14c-5c = 9c
12C and 14C are isotopes, meaning they are atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei. Isotopes have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons.
The most common element used is the element Carbon. More precisely, Carbon 14 or simply 14C, an isotope of Carbon (same number of protons but two more neutrons than plain old 12C, the most common variety of carbon) is used. All living organism have 14C and the amount of 14C in a living organism is constant throughout it's life. However, as the creature dies, the 14C level drops. The rate of drop is know precisely. Therefore, by measuring how much 14C is in the remains, the time the organism died can be known (usually to within decades).
The following atoms are all variations of the element carbon 12C 13C 14C what are these variations called isotopes. Isotopes are variants of a particular chemical element.
17
There is a formula for the "difference of squares." In this case, the answer is (5b - 14c)(5b + 14c)
If the element in question is carbon, it has 6 protons, whether it's 12C, 13C, 14C, or any of its other 12 known isotopes.
14c + c + 12 = 15c + 12 = 3(5c + 4)
The number of neutrons is never directly displayed.For a given isotope of an element, the "top number" (e.g. 14C or carbon-14) is the atomic mass number, the total of neutrons and protons. To find the number of neutrons, subtract the atomic number from the isotopes atomic mass number. Here, 14C will have 8 neutrons.
Carbon-14 (14C) has 6 protons and 8 neutrons in its nucleus, along with 6 electrons orbiting the nucleus in energy levels. The arrangement of subatomic particles in 14C follows the standard structure of a carbon atom.
2 x 2 x 7 x 7 x c x c