If this atom is part of a compound, the properties change.
I Mean, the properties of Oxygen in the molecule O2 is Different from that in compound CO2
Conc. Atoms lose their properties if they form a compound with different atoms
There are three stable Isotopes of Oxygen: 16O, 17O, and 18O. Their half lives vary and so do their relative atomic masses. As a result they have slight differences in their physical properties.
The isotopes of oxygen have very slightly different chemical properties, primarily spectroscopic and rates of reaction, that would not ordinarily easily be noticed.
The atoms may be slightly different in shape or size etc. however if they are all of the same type they will all behave and react in the same way. Eg. Two atoms of Frankium may be different in the ways I have described but their chemical properties, behaviour and reactivity are the same.
They have all the chemical, physical, nuclear properties identical. This is not the case for isotopes.
An atom is a structure of protons, neutrons and electrons. A collection of atoms that all share the same number of protons are all given the same element name (i.e. all carbon atoms have exactly 6 protons, and all helium atoms have 2). a compound is a collection of atoms of different elements that are bonded together. A good example of this is water, which is made of two Hydrogen atoms and one Oxygen atom bound together.
Ozone is the triatomic form of oxygen. All the three atoms in ozone are of oxygen.
The elements that compose it and the arrangement of its atoms
Because they are all the same type of atoms. Oxygen is an element. If you have 10 oxygen atoms, they will all behave like oxygen, since they are the same element.
All atoms are elements. Single (or even a "few") atoms do not have the properties of large masses of atoms.
yes.
The smallest particle of matter that keeps all the same properties of oxygen is an oxygen atom. If you mean oxygen gas, O2, then it would be a molecule of two oxygen atoms covalently bonded.
He concluded that all atoms of an element have same mass and identical chemical and physical properties.
Because all of the atoms in it have the same number of protons.
All compounds are made out of atoms of the same element or differed elements.
The atoms may be slightly different in shape or size etc. however if they are all of the same type they will all behave and react in the same way. Eg. Two atoms of Frankium may be different in the ways I have described but their chemical properties, behaviour and reactivity are the same.
No some can be very strong like lightning
No itβs just like a snowflake there are all different
They have all the chemical, physical, nuclear properties identical. This is not the case for isotopes.
Oxygen atoms are important because oxygen is necessary to all higher life forms.