Let's do the math.
There are currently about 120 known chemical elements. On average, each element has around three isotopes (where the nucleus has the same number of protons, but a different number of neutrons).
So a quick and dirty number would be that there are around 300-350 unique atomic nuclei. Or possibly twice that, if you consider the antimatter versions of each.
there are about 100 types of atoms as there are only about a 100 known elements! scientists however can only use 25 of them.
there are 92 different types of atom found naturally on earth. your body is made up of just 26 of these!
There are 118 different types of atoms because there are 118 elements on the Periodic Table of elements and each element is made of one type of atom like hydrogen is made of only hydrogen atoms but it has 1 atom in it and irin is made of 26 atoms tha are all iron atoms
Depends on the type of element. in one molecule of water, represented by H2O, there are three atoms, two hydrogen and one oxygen. In H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) there are four atoms, two hydrogen and two oxygen. The subscripts (small number underneath the letters) tell you how many atoms there are. If there is no subscript, it is understood that there is only one atom.
There are 118 elements, though only 80 of these have stable isotopes and 26 are man made
Actinium
Aluminum
Americium
Antimony
Argon
Arsenic
Astatine
Barium
Berkelium
Beryllium
Bismuth
Bohrium
Boron
Bromine
Cadmium
Calcium
Californium
Carbon
Cerium
Cesium
Chlorine
Chromium
Cobalt
Copper
Curium
Darmstadtium
Dubnium
Dysprosium
Einsteinium
Erbium
Europium
Fermium
Fluorine
Francium
Gadolinium
Gallium
Germanium
Gold
Hafnium
Hassium
Helium
Holmium
Hydrogen
Indium
Iodine
Iridium
Iron
Krypton
Lanthanum
Lawrencium
Lead
Lithium
Lutetium
Magnesium
Manganese
Meitnerium
Mendelevium
Molybdenum
Neodymium
Neon
Neptunium
Nickel
Niobium
Nitrogen
Nobelium
Osmium
Oxygen
Palladium
Phosphorus
Platinum
Plutonium
Polonium
Potassium
Praseodymium
Promethium
Protactinium
Radium
Radon
Rhenium
Rhodium
Rubidium
Ruthenium
Rutherfordium
Samarium
Scandium
Seaborgium
Selenium
Silicon
Silver
Sodium
Strontium
Sulfur
Tantalum
Technetium
Tellurium
Terbium
Thallium
Thorium
Thulium
Tin
Titanium
Tungsten
Ununbium
Ununnilium
Ununumium
Uranium
Vanadium
Xenon
Ytterbium
Yttrium
Zinc
Zirconium
The question is too vague to answer. All atoms of the same element have the same number of protons (if they had a different number of protons, they'd be a different element). However, they don't have to have the same number of neutrons, and the number of stable isotopes of an element vary depending on what the element is (some elements even have NO stable isotopes; depending on what theory you believe, it's possible that over the very long term no elements are stable... it is, however, true that we don't know of any stable isotopes for elements of higher Z than lead, and it's at least theoretically possible that the "stable" isotopes of lead are actually radioactive with extremely long half-lives).
An element is ONE kind of atoms in a (poly-atomic) molecule, or it is one atom itself (mono-atomic element)
Today are known approx. 3 100 isotopes and isomers.
There are 110 atoms!!!!
120 different kinds of atoms
4 atoms it is different than ammonium
Sugar has three kinds of atoms
many different atoms
1 sulfur atom 2 oxygen atoms
3 different elements, silver carbon and oxygen. 6 atoms total.
there are 100,000,0000,0000,0000 atoms in starch
No different ones, just Oxygen atoms.
21 different kinds of atoms
There are 31 atoms total in penicillin.
4 atoms it is different than ammonium
carbon can bond with 4 different atoms.
Sugar has three kinds of atoms
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3
many different atoms
A cell is larger, as it is composed of many atoms of different elements.
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