Neutron
No, carbon is not a subatomic particle. Carbon is an element, specifically a chemical element with the symbol "C" and atomic number 6, meaning it has 6 protons in its nucleus. Subatomic particles are particles that are smaller than atoms, such as protons, neutrons, and electrons.
No, it is an element - a type of atom. The positive hydrogen ion, on the other hand, is usually identical with the proton, which is a subatomic particle.
protons, no. of protons is equal to the atomic number of an element.
neutrons
This particle is the proton.
The number of protons is determining the element
In the chemical reactivity of atoms electrons are involved.
The number of protons in an atom determines which element it is (i.e Silver-47 protons vs. Gold-79 protons)
The subatomic particle that defines the element is the proton. The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom determines the element's atomic number, which differentiates one element from another on the periodic table.
no i cant answer it
An "element" is not a subatomic particle. Your question makes no sense and is therefore unanswerable.Another answer:Since an element is not a subatomic particle, the only answer can be a proton.
The number of protons tells you which chemical element the atom is. The number of neutrons determines the isotope of the element.
The number of protons defines the element.
Subatomic particles identify elements based on the number of protons in the nucleus. Protons give the element its identity, as each element has a unique number of protons. This number is known as the atomic number, and it determines how the element behaves chemically and physically.
Neutron
Silicon is a chemical element not a particle.