I believe your question is incomplete. What is an inert gas and has one more proton... one more proton than what, exactly? Than hydrogen? If so, the answer would be helium.
The gas is helium. Helium is inert and has 2 protons, while hydrogen has 1 proton.
2 protons, 2 electrons He-3 isotope has 1 neutron He-4 isotope has 2 neutrons
Argon is the unreactive gas that makes up 1 percent of the Earth's atmosphere. It is a noble gas and is commonly used in applications where an inert atmosphere is required, such as in light bulbs and welding.
It's a fraction of normal atmospheric pressure, but each type of lamp has a particular pressure, depending on the type of gas and the application.
It has 3 more protons than electrons. Protons are 1+ and electrons are 1-. So the charge on the hypothetical ion would be 3+
The gas is helium. Helium is inert and has 2 protons, while hydrogen has 1 proton.
2 protons, 2 electrons He-3 isotope has 1 neutron He-4 isotope has 2 neutrons
In 1 mole of NO2 gas, there are a total of 9 moles of protons. This is because NO2 has 1 nitrogen atom and 2 oxygen atoms, which contain a total of 9 protons (7 protons from nitrogen and 2 protons from each oxygen).
there is 1.25 percent of inert gases in the atmosphere
The type of a element is determined by the number of protons it carries. The element which have to protons is helium. An instance of the element with more electrons than protons, which makes it negatively charged, is called a anion or a negative ion. However, helium is one of, what are called, inert gases. The number of electrons in an inert gas is at the most stable number. It is quite hard to add or extract electrons from an inert gas. So without sounding absolute, He(-) is quite hard to come by.
The bonds between two atoms of nitrogen (78% of the atmosphere) in the N2 molecule make it inert for many purposes. However under high heat (lightning for example) it reacts with oxygen to form nitrogen compounds. Argon at 1% of the atmosphere is a noble gas and is inert under all atmospheric conditions.
No. Argon is an inert gas that only makes up 1% of air. It is of little consequence to us.
the charge depends on the number of protons or electrons, if more electrons are there than protons there is a -1 charge, if there are more protons then electrons it is a +1 charge. Called Ions
Argon makes up nearly 1 percent of Earth's atmosphere. It is a colorless, odorless, and inert gas that is part of the noble gas group.
Argon is the unreactive gas that makes up 1 percent of the Earth's atmosphere. It is a noble gas and is commonly used in applications where an inert atmosphere is required, such as in light bulbs and welding.
Argon makes up roughly one percent of Earth's atmospheric gases. A more precise/exact amount would be 0.93%
It's a fraction of normal atmospheric pressure, but each type of lamp has a particular pressure, depending on the type of gas and the application.