The isotope of an element is the different versions of that element. Due to the different number of neutrons. So the same element can have different numbers of neutrons in it's nucleus and therefore different mass numbers e.g. Chlorine 35 or Chlorine 37. Both contain identical numbers of protons but different numbers of neutrons.
An isotope of an element is one whose atoms have the same number of protons as all of the atoms of the element, but a different number of neutrons. Mass number is the number of protons plus neutrons in the atomic nuclei of a particular isotope. An isotope is named for its mass number, such as carbon-12 and carbon-14 isotopes.
Isotopes are atoms of the same element having same atomic number but different Atomic Mass. For example there are three isotopes of hydrogen namely protium, deutrium and tritium.
An isotope of an atom is an atom which has a different number of neutrons in it's nucleus, therefore changing it's atomic weight.
(The number of protons and electrons stay the same.)
an isotope of an element
An isotope of an element has a different number of Neutrons to the original element it came from. EG: Carbon( 11 neurtons) can go to carbon(12 Neutrons(
Yes. The gram atomic mass of each element is the sum of the products of each stable isotope's isotopic fraction multiplied by the mass of that isotope.
average atomic massof an element=(Atomic mass of first isotope X % of that isotope) + (Atomic mass of second isotope X % of the second isotope)
These terms apply to the decay of radionuclides. The parent isotope is 'the starting point' of a decay series that when it decays, by giving off radiation, changes into another element, or isotope of the original element (the daughter isotope). For example: When Uranium 238 (parent isotope) decays and gives off an alpha particle, it transmutes into Thorium 234 (the daughter isotope).
Because each isotope of an element has a mass different from any other isotope of the same element, and the atomic mass of an element is an average, weighted by the proportion of each isotope, in the naturally occurring element.
an isotope of an element
An isotope of Neon. This isotope accounts for between a fifth and a quarter of the element.
its nucleus is unstable
Yes, the isotope potassium-39 has 20 neutrons.
An isotope shares the atomic number with its element atom. How does it differ from the element atom?
An isotope of an element has a different number of Neutrons to the original element it came from. EG: Carbon( 11 neurtons) can go to carbon(12 Neutrons(
An element is a class of substances An atom is the smallest possible piece of an element. An isotope is an electrically charged atom.
Yes. The gram atomic mass of each element is the sum of the products of each stable isotope's isotopic fraction multiplied by the mass of that isotope.
average atomic massof an element=(Atomic mass of first isotope X % of that isotope) + (Atomic mass of second isotope X % of the second isotope)
These terms apply to the decay of radionuclides. The parent isotope is 'the starting point' of a decay series that when it decays, by giving off radiation, changes into another element, or isotope of the original element (the daughter isotope). For example: When Uranium 238 (parent isotope) decays and gives off an alpha particle, it transmutes into Thorium 234 (the daughter isotope).
Without knowing the element and the specific isotope, this has no answer.