yes we have various isotopes on the difference in the number of neutrons
The beta particle will alter the electromagnetic field of the atom. An electron will add to the electromagnetic charge if emitted, and subtract from, if it is absorbed. A positron will do the opposite. The atomic nucleus will also change. an electron can convert a neutron to a proton if emitted, and a proton to a neutron if absorbed. The positron, again, will do the opposite.
Presumably you mean how many neutrons? Chlorine has various isotopes, each having a different number of neutrons - take the mass of the isotope, subtract the atomic number (17), and the answer is the number of neutrons.
The neutron is called the neutron because it it electrically neutral, hence the neu- prefix
A neutron does not have a charge -- its neutral
The neutron. There are others, but the neutron is the best-known particle that is electrically neutral.The neutron. There are others, but the neutron is the best-known particle that is electrically neutral.The neutron. There are others, but the neutron is the best-known particle that is electrically neutral.The neutron. There are others, but the neutron is the best-known particle that is electrically neutral.
A neutron.
Find the weight on the periodic table then subtract the proton numbers.
Take the Atomic Mass and round it to the nearest whole number. Then subtract this number and the atomic number of that element.
Selenium. If you subtract 34 from 78.96, you get 44.96.
If you mean to find the amount of neutrons in an atom, you take the atomic mass and subtract the atomic number (the number of protons). That gives you the average number of neutrons.
Neutrons have a neutral charge. They do not add or subtract from the overall charge like protons and electrons do. They do,however, add mass to the atom.
The neutron.
The beta particle will alter the electromagnetic field of the atom. An electron will add to the electromagnetic charge if emitted, and subtract from, if it is absorbed. A positron will do the opposite. The atomic nucleus will also change. an electron can convert a neutron to a proton if emitted, and a proton to a neutron if absorbed. The positron, again, will do the opposite.
Presumably you mean how many neutrons? Chlorine has various isotopes, each having a different number of neutrons - take the mass of the isotope, subtract the atomic number (17), and the answer is the number of neutrons.
The neutron is called the neutron because it it electrically neutral, hence the neu- prefix
No. A neutron carries no charge.
There is no such thing as a "positive neutron" or a "negative neutron". A neutron is always neutral.