15 protons.
An atom of iron would have pretty much the same subatomic particles as most other atoms - protons, electrons, and neutrons. Protons and neutrons are made up of more fundamental particles, quarks. The defining factor that makes it iron is that it would have 26 protons; in a neutral iron atom that would mean it would have 26 electrons. Different isotopes of iron might have differing numbers of neutrons, about 92% of iron is Fe-56 which has 30 neutrons.
Phosphorus and sulfur both have 16 neutrons.
A positive ion.
the same number of both proton and neutron
The number of protons an element has is given by its Atomic Number in the Periodic tableThe Atomic Number of Iron = 26The Atomic Number of Phosphorus = 15
Phosphorus has 15 protons.
15 electrons and 15 protons
No, Phosphorus 31 does not have 16 protons. All Phosphorus atoms have the same number of protons, since the number of protons is what determines which element it is. For phosphorus, the atomic number is 15, meaning it has 15 protons. Phosphorus 31 also has 16 neutrons and 15 electrons.
The atomic number of phosphorus is 15. So there are 15 protons in the nucleus of protons
Phosphorus with 3 more electrons than protons.
The element that has 15 protons in it's protons is phosphorus (P).
Phosphorus (P) has 15 protons and 15 electrons. Phosphorus-31, the only stable isotope of Phosphorus, has 16 neutrons.
The atomic number of phosphorus is 15. So there are 15 protons
All phosphorus atoms have 15 protons (hence their atomic number of fifteen). Assuming the atom is neutral, it will also have an equal amount of electrons.
Im assuming you mean protons because phosphorus is its own atom... but anyway phosphorus has 15 protons in its nucleus
PHOSPHORUS (P): Protons: 15 Electrons: 15 Neutrons: 16