wouldnt it just be Si
The superscript is the mass number (28) and the subscript is the atomic number (14).
The nuclide notation for an atom with 13 protons and 5 neutrons is (^{18}_{13}Al), where the superscript is the sum of protons and neutrons (18) and the subscript is the atomic number (13) for the element aluminum (Al).
The subscript of platinum-195 is 78, which represents the atomic number of platinum (the number of protons in its nucleus). The superscript is 195, which represents the mass number of the isotope (the total number of protons and neutrons in its nucleus).
The subscript (19) indicates that this atom has 19 protons (as well as 19 electrons). The supersript (40) denotes that it has 40 protons and neutrons, hence we can infer that it has 21 neutrons.
A nuclide is identified by the number of protons in its nucleus, known as the atomic number, and the total number of protons and neutrons, known as the mass number. These two properties determine the unique identity of a specific nuclide.
The superscript in platinum-95 (Pt-95) refers to the atomic number of the element, which is 78 (number of protons). The subscript represents the atomic mass of the isotope, which is the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of the atom.
The superscript is the atomic mass number, which is the sum of protons and neutrons. The subscript is the atomic number, which is the number of protons. For a hafnium nuclide with 107 neutrons, the superscript would be 180 (107 neutrons + 73 protons) and the subscript would be 73.
The nuclide notation for an atom with 13 protons and 5 neutrons is (^{18}_{13}Al), where the superscript is the sum of protons and neutrons (18) and the subscript is the atomic number (13) for the element aluminum (Al).
The subscript of platinum-195 is 78, which represents the atomic number of platinum (the number of protons in its nucleus). The superscript is 195, which represents the mass number of the isotope (the total number of protons and neutrons in its nucleus).
The subscript (19) indicates that this atom has 19 protons (as well as 19 electrons). The supersript (40) denotes that it has 40 protons and neutrons, hence we can infer that it has 21 neutrons.
A nuclide is identified by the number of protons in its nucleus, known as the atomic number, and the total number of protons and neutrons, known as the mass number. These two properties determine the unique identity of a specific nuclide.
The symbol of an atom of boron with 5 neutrons and 5 protons is ^10B. The superscript indicates the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus, and the atomic number (number of protons) is typically placed as a subscript.
Silicon has 14 protons and 14 neutrons. -I hope this helped-
This is a stable isotope of sulfur: 1616S.
That seems to be an invalid notation. The subscript refers to the number of protons (5=Boron), but 'C' refers to the element (Carbon). Ignoring the 'C', Protons: 5 (Boron) Neutrons: 13-5= 8 Neutrons Electrons: 4+5= 9 Electrons
Any atom with 23 protons in each nucleus is a vanadium atom and therefore has the atomic symbol V Also, any atom with 23 protons and 31 neutrons has a mass number of (23 + 31) or 54. Therefore, the atom may be described as an atom of "vanadium-54". There is a shorter symbol that is usually preferred, but it is impossible to write within the typographical constraints of this WikiAnswers program. That symbol is the letter "V" with both a superscript of "54" and a subscript of "23" on the left side of but adjacent to the letter V.
Unfortunately WikiAnswers doesn't accept subscript/superscript.For the isotope thorium-232: 232Th90232 is a superscript (mass number) and 90 is a subscript (atomic number).
The superscript in platinum-95 (Pt-95) refers to the atomic number of the element, which is 78 (number of protons). The subscript represents the atomic mass of the isotope, which is the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of the atom.