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yes. Isotopes of an element have the same number of protons, thus electorns, thus the same chemical properties. Where isotpes differ is in the number of neutrons. Consider hydrogen, atomic number 1, atomic weight 1, 1 proton, 1 electron vs duterium, atomic number 1 atomic weight 2, 1 proton, 1 electron, 1 neutron. H2O = water D2O = heavy water
Yes; isotopes of the same element have the same atomic number but differ in their atomic masses.
These atoms are called isotopes and they have a different number of neutrons.
All atoms in a pure sample of one element have the same mass. The atoms in a different element have a different mass. Different atoms is what makes different elements.
NO. The number of electrons in any neutral atom must be the same as the number of protons. The number of protons is the atomic number, if the atomic number is the same then the atoms are of the same element, not different ones.
The number of protons in the nuclei of their atoms. This is the atomic number of an element and each element has its own unique atomic number.
Atoms with the same atomic number are all atoms of the same element. However, if the atoms have different molecular weights, they are isotopes of the same element.
All elements are composed of atoms that all have the same atomic number. If the atomic number is different then you have a different element. The number of neutrons can be different and you will have a different isotope of that element with a different mass. An example of an element that only has one isotope is fluorine.
isotope
No. Each type of atom (element) has its own unique number of protons, which is called the atomic number. Atoms of the same element will always have the same atomic number (number of protons). Atoms of different elements will never have the same atomic number (number of protons).
No. The atomic number of an element is determined by its number of protons. If two atoms have different numbers of protons, they have different atomic numbers and are different elements.
yes. Isotopes of an element have the same number of protons, thus electorns, thus the same chemical properties. Where isotpes differ is in the number of neutrons. Consider hydrogen, atomic number 1, atomic weight 1, 1 proton, 1 electron vs duterium, atomic number 1 atomic weight 2, 1 proton, 1 electron, 1 neutron. H2O = water D2O = heavy water
Atomic number is the number of protons in the nuclei of the atoms of an element. Atomic number is unique to each element. Atomic Mass is the combined mass of the protons, neutrons, and electrons in an atom of an element.
Yes; isotopes of the same element have the same atomic number but differ in their atomic masses.
isotopes Atoms of the same element are called Isotopes. they have the same number of atoms (i.e. same atomic number) but different number of neutrons
isotopes
These atoms are called isotopes and they have a different number of neutrons.