I do not know about anything beyond that, but that much I'm certain on.
I don't know about the above answer but from what I know in Chemistry is that the protons is what makes the isotopes of each element differ and the neutrons. Hope this helps
I think the first answer is correct. The protons do not make any difference. That's from AP Bio knowlege.
Different isotopes of the same element have a different number of neutrons. This makes different isotopes chemically similar, but the nuclei are very different things. For example, H-1 and H-2 are stable, whereas H-3 is radioactive, with a half-life of about 18 years.
Because they have the same number of electrons, all isotopes of an element have the same chemical properties.
They differ because they have a different mass number due to different number of neutrons in the nucleus.
isotopes of any given atom have the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons
isotopes of a given element differ in the number of neutrons they have.
Neutrons.
Two isotopes differ in the number of neutrons in the nucleus. For example, Carbon-14 has 8 neutrons differing from Carbon-12 which has 6 neutrons.
neutron
number of neutrons and mass
just number of neutrons
Different isotopes of an element differ in the number of neutrons and thus in their atomic weight.
isotopes of a given element differ in the number of neutrons they have.
Isotopes of the same element have different number of neutrons.
Isotopes of the same element differ in the number of neutrons. Isotopes have different physical properties but similar chemical properties.
Atoms of the same element that differ in the number of neutrons they contain are known as isotopes.
Number of Neutrons
Neutrons.
neutrons
neutrons
Isotopes of the same element ONLY differ in mass.
Isotopes are forms of the same element that differ in Neutrons.