Absolutely. The term "element" in science basically means "a grouping of the SAME kind of atom," meaning in gold you will only have gold atoms.
There are no "atoms in an element," but rather atoms OF an element. If you are trying to find the number of atoms in a sample of a pure element you divide its weight by its molar mass and then multiply by 6.022 x 10^23 to get the answer in atoms. The answer options are 2,3, or 4.
The number of atoms in an element depends on WHAT element AND how much of that element.
Yes
Atoms of the same element are alike in terms of their number of protons, which determines the element. However, atoms of the same element can differ in the number of neutrons they contain, leading to different isotopes of that element.
same number of each element
carbon
Beryllium is the alkaline earth element with the least massive atoms.
The number of atoms in an element depends on the element's atomic mass and the amount of the element present. One mole of an element contains approximately 6.022 x 10^23 atoms, known as Avogadro's number.
All the atoms have the same number of protons (element type).
Gold is the element gold no matter how many atoms of it you have.
It is composed of one type of atoms: Zinc atoms. That is, by definition, an element.
An element is made by atoms. smallest part of element is atom.