No. The electron and proton have the same amount of charge. Its just that the electron's charge is negative and the proton's charge is positive.
In kilograms, an electron's mass is ~9 x 10^(-31). A proton's mass is ~1.7 x 10^(-27). The mass of the proton is more than 1000 times of an electron.
During electron capture, an electron and proton combine and are converted to a neutron.
This statement is incorrect. A proton has a mass that is approximately 1836 times greater than that of an electron.
Mass ratio proton (neutron)/electron: 1 836
I think you won't have a atom because the electron, proton and neutron is the basic part of the atom.
well there r 3 types theres neutron,proton,and electron, the electron is negative and proton is positive but neutron is nucleus but what atoms release isquarks wich are held together by gluons
Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.Neutron, proton, electron.
An electron will not decay into a proton by any means.
A proton is bigger than electron
A proton is bigger than electron
No. The electron and proton have the same amount of charge. Its just that the electron's charge is negative and the proton's charge is positive.
remove either a proton or electron OR add a proton or electron...
An electron is 1/1,836 of a proton.
You can't just remove a proton or an electron. But theoretically, it will become an atom of the compound just before it in the periodic table. For example, Oxygen will become Nitrogen.
A proton and an electron have exactly opposite charges. If you take the charge of a proton as +1, then an electron has a charge of -1.
In kilograms, an electron's mass is ~9 x 10^(-31). A proton's mass is ~1.7 x 10^(-27). The mass of the proton is more than 1000 times of an electron.