There is only one proton in hydrogen.
A standard hydrogen atom has 1 proton. The Atomic Number of any element is the number of protons that element has.
hydrogen
Well... the element number defines the number of protons, and usually the electrons. the neutrons are determined with... i dunno :P I.E. hydrogen is 1. Therefor, in hydrogen there are 1 protons and 1 electrons.
its hydrogen symbol is H
The element it is hydrogen has 1 proton, helium 2, by changing protons you change what element it is.
The "NUMBER" (#) of Protons in an Atom of Hydrogen is one (1). The number of protons is what makes a specific element that element. Hydrogen always has one proton no matter what. If someone says that a hydrogen atom has two protons(they are incorrect), it is no longer hydrogen; it is the element Helium.
The atomic number in an element is equal to the number of protons in an element. For example, Hydrogen has an atomic number of 1 and 1 proton.
The number of protons defines the element. So if an atom has one proton, you will automatically know it is hydrogen. The number of neutrons or electrons will not change what element it is. Though if the question is asking, hydrogen with two protons is 3H, or tritium.
Yes, the number of protons defines what element it is. 1 proton = Hydrogen, 2 protons = Helium and so on
It is hydrogen element. It is tritium isotope of hydrogen.
The isotopes of hydrogen are all hydrogen. They have the same number of protons, or atomic number, which is unique to each element.
The periodic number of an element signifies its number of protons. Hydrogen, the first element, has one proton. Helium, the second element, has two protons. Lithium, the third element, has three protons. I'm sure you can figure out the rest.