I am an adult studying high school chemistry on my own. I'm at lost at how to use the atomic table.
Here's what I learn so far, the example is on Carbon:
IV Number of electrons in the outer shell
6 Atomic Number Equals to the number of its protons
C Atomic Symbol
12 Atomic Mass Equals the number of protons plus the number of neutrons
Proton = 6 because Atomic number is 6
Electron = 6 because IV=4 on the outer shell + 2 in the inner shell
Neutron = 6 because the number 12 minus 6 protons from atomic number
So far so good.
Now I'm stumped with the example below for Potassium:
The answer has this numbers and I don't know how to get number of electrons:
Protons = 19 because from Atomic Number
Electrons = 19 how do you get 19?
Neutrons = 20 (39-19) because Atomic Mass - Atomic Number
What is "IA"? How many electrons on the outer shell for potasium? There is 2 electrons on the inner shell, so if I minus (19-2=17), "IA" is 17? What is really the "IA"? How do you get the number of electrons in the case of potassium?