They have the same number of protons and electrons.
How isotopes same as element alike?
The average of all the naturally occurring isotopes of a particular element are an element's atomic Mass.
Electrons
Isotopes of a chemical element have a similar number of protons but a different number of neutrons.
Isotopes are alike in that they have the same number of protons (same atomic number), which means they belong to the same element. They also have similar chemical properties due to this shared atomic number. Finally, isotopes can be identified by the element's symbol followed by a hyphen and the mass number.
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.
They have the same number of protons this is what makes them the same element but they differ in atomic mass and neutrons.
No, the isotopes of a single element differ in the no. of neutrons
No, not all atoms of a given element are alike in all respects. Isotopes are atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons, leading to variations in atomic mass. This means isotopes of the same element may behave slightly differently in certain chemical reactions.
The weighted average of all of the natural occuring isotopes for a particular element is called its Atomic Weight (or Relative Atomic Mass)
When the masses of all naturally occurring isotopes of a particular element are averaged, the result is called the atomic mass of the element.
The weighted average of all of the natural occuring isotopes for a particular element is called its Atomic Weight (or Relative Atomic Mass)