If hydrogen had a neutron, it wouldn't be hydrogen; it would be deuterium. If it had two neutrons, it would be tritium.
False. Tritium is an isotope of hydrogen with 2 neutrons.
Deuterium, which is a stable isotope of hydrogen with an extra neutron, is present in heavy water (D2O).
Deuterium is an isotope of hydrogen that contains one proton and one neutron. It is commonly referred to as "heavy hydrogen" due to its higher atomic mass compared to regular hydrogen, which has no neutrons.
To answer your question: no, hydrogen atoms (the isotope hydrogen-1, protium) consist of a single proton and a single electron.Although they can consist of one proton, one electron and up to six neutrons.
There is 0 neutron in a Hydrogen-1 isotope. Hydrogen-1 has an atomic number of 1, which means it has 1 proton and no neutrons.
Hydrogen-1, (there is a trace of hydrogen-2 (deuterium) found in nature, and hydrogen-3 is an artificial isotope)
Heavy water contain deuterium, a hydrogen isotope having one neutron.
Deuterium, it has 1 neutron and one proton.
Hydrogen isotopes differ by the number of neutrons they contain. Protium, the most common isotope, has no neutrons. Deuterium, another isotope, contains one neutron. Tritium, the third hydrogen isotope, contains two neutrons.
Hydrogen atom has an average mass not equal to its common isotope. The most common isotope of hydrogen, hydrogen-1, does not have a neutron in its nucleus, while the average mass of a hydrogen atom accounts for the other isotopes of hydrogen which do contain neutrons.
deuterium
no, ordinary hydrogen has only one proton.
False. Tritium is an isotope of hydrogen with 2 neutrons.
The isotope hydrogen-1 don't contain neutrons.
Hydrogen-2. That is hydrogen isotope 2. It is commonly called deuterium.
DEUTERIUM ,it is 2nd isotope of hydrogen atom .It contain one proton and one neutron in its nucleus and one electron in it outer most shell . It is also known as (heavy hydrogen)
Deuterium, which is a stable isotope of hydrogen with an extra neutron, is present in heavy water (D2O).