Isotopes are exactly same with respect to all the chemical properties but they differ with respect to physical properties.
How isotopes same as element alike?
Yes, chemically they are alike (more correct is to say that the differences are not significant).
They have the same number of protons and electrons.
Isotopes of a given element all have the same number of protons. They differ in their number of neutrons.
The isotopes of an element are alike in that they have the same number of protons, electrons, and the same chemical properties. The isotopes are different in that they have different numbers of neutrons and thus different atomic masses.
They have all the chemical, physical, nuclear properties identical. This is not the case for isotopes.
No! Nuclides with different element names are never isotopes of each other, because their nuclei contain different numbers of protons and therefore are not chemically alike.
Elements can exist in the form of different isotopes. Isotopes of the same element have the same number of protons in their nuclei but have different numbers of neutrons. The first gives them the same atomic number and chemical properties while the second gives them different atomic weights.
They have the same number of protons this is what makes them the same element but they differ in atomic mass and neutrons.
They have the same number of protons (and of electrons) and so their chemical properties are the same.
No. Most elements have several isotopes, which differ in the number of neutrons, which in turn affects atomic mass.
The three isotopes of hydrogen are called: hydrogen (1H or H, no neutrons), deuterium (2H or D, one neutron), and tritium (3H or T, two neutrons).They each have their own special name to make it easier to refer to them. They are fairly commonly used in chemistry and physics (especially deuterium).