electron
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.
The subatomic particles are: neutron, proton and electron.
The electron.
You think probable to neutrons.
No, an electron is a subatomic particle. Electrons are a part of atoms.
Electrons orbit the atomic nucleus in an electron cloud.
Electrons circle the atomic nucleus in an electron cloud.
The most important is the proton; the number of protons is equal to the atomic number.
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.
Isotopes are atoms, not subatomic particles.
These particle are neutrons and protons; they are located in the atomic nucleus.
no. ions are made of relatively whole atoms (plus or minus a few electrons)
The subatomic particles are: neutron, proton and electron.
The particle you are referring to is an "electron." It is a negatively charged subatomic particle found in atoms.
Yes.
The electron.
Hydrogen has the smallest atomic mass at roughly 1.008 grams per mol (6.02x10^23 atoms)