hydrogen and deuterium is an example
isotopes
Some do, some don't. Scandium and manganese, for example, do not, copper has only two isotopes.
No, isotopes of light elements exist as well. For example, there are several isotopes of the lightest element, hydrogen.No, even the lightest element (hydrogen (H)) has isotopes. These are called Deuterium and Tritium.All elements have isotopes but some of them are very unstable and have disappeared in nature over time.
Because "isotopes" change the properties of an element. For example, pure/true potassium is highly explosive, but with isotopes, it can make it nutrients for everyday consumption.
Hydrogen-3 Carbon-14 Potassium-40 All isotopes every Actinide (eg=Uranium, Actinium, Thorium) All isotopes of Technetium , etc.
no isotopes of a particular chemical element all have the same number of protons
Isotopes are formed by nucleosynthesis.Uranium natural isotopes: U-234, U-235, U-238.
An example is uranium.
Some do, some don't. Scandium and manganese, for example, do not, copper has only two isotopes.
No, they are isotopes with the same atomic mass. But they are isotopes of different elements and so are very different from on another. For example nitrogen-16 and nitrogen-14 are isotopes of the same element.
The same name with a different atomic mass number. As an example U235 and U238 are two isotopes of Uranium
No, isotopes of light elements exist as well. For example, there are several isotopes of the lightest element, hydrogen.No, even the lightest element (hydrogen (H)) has isotopes. These are called Deuterium and Tritium.All elements have isotopes but some of them are very unstable and have disappeared in nature over time.
Hydrogen-2, Carbon-13, Uranium-238
Because "isotopes" change the properties of an element. For example, pure/true potassium is highly explosive, but with isotopes, it can make it nutrients for everyday consumption.
They are called isotopes. An example of isotopes are Carbon-12 and Carbon-14.
Yes. There are no stable isotopes of astatine, they are all radioactive.
For example some useful isotopes: 241Am, 242mAm, 243Am.
Hydrogen-3 Carbon-14 Potassium-40 All isotopes every Actinide (eg=Uranium, Actinium, Thorium) All isotopes of Technetium , etc.