The atomic number of an isotope is always identical to every other isotope, otherwise, it would form a separate element.
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Isotopes of an atom does retain the properties of the atom. This is discrete in units of matter.
Isotopes of an atom does retain the properties of the atom. This is discrete in units of matter.
Different isotopes of an atom are determined by the number of neutrons it contains.
All the isotopes of an atom have the same number of protons but different number of neutrons.
Yes, different isotopes of an atom have the same number of protons and electrons, so they have the same chemical properties. However, they have different numbers of neutrons, giving them different masses.
Isotopes are found in the nucleus of an atom. They are atoms of the same element with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. The different isotopes of an element have the same chemical properties but different physical properties.
We can find atomic mass and mass number in chemical elements. Atomic mass is about weight of the atom. Mass number is about total of neutrons and protons.
The chemical element nihonium (Nh) has 7 isotopes.
Isotopes: atoms with the same atomic number (also identical number of protons and electrons) but with a different number of neutrons and consequently with a different atomic mass.An isotope is an atom; the atom has not isotopes but an element has isotopes (natural or artificial).
The isotopes are uranium-235 or plutonium-239.
The isotopes of an atom are defined by the number of neutrons their nuclei have for their fixed number of protons. However, I wouldn't say that neutrons are solely responsible for the presence of isotopes because isotopes also depend on the existence of many other particles such as protons, quarks and gluons. Neutrons certainly are responsible for the way we label isotopes, though.