In a series circuit, the current through each element is the same current. Because the total current must flow through every element. In a parallel circuit, the voltage across each element is the same voltage. Because every element is connected individually across the power supply.
element, compound, etc?
No, isotopes of the same element are of different weight.
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.
The answer expected here is non-metal, and examples are carbon, chlorine, sulfur phosphorus. Metals have metallic bonds. However there are compounds where atoms of a metallic element form covalent bonds to other atoms of the same element.
they are the same element because an element has an atomic number through its number of protons so if there was an element with 2 protons it would be number 2 in the periodic table which is helium, if another element has 2 protons it should be helium still, if it wasn't modified in anyway
An atom can undergo an infinite number of decay events while remaining the same element as long as it does not change its atomic number. For example, isotopes of an element can undergo decay processes like alpha or beta decay, yet still be classified as the same element if they retain the same number of protons. However, once the atomic number changes through decay, the atom transforms into a different element.
An element does not split up when a current passes through it. The current causes electrons to flow through the element, but the element remains intact.
Restate the question: it makes no sense; same element as what?
No. Atoms of the same element have the same chemical properties.
They may come from different isotopes of the same element, but not from the same atom.
What is a function where each domain element is mapped to the same range element.