Yes
yes
It is an element because it only contains one type of atom, meaning all the atoms have the same number of protons.
yes because the atoms in the specific element have the same properties as that element. :D
What is a function where each domain element is mapped to the same range element.
For two isotopes to be of the same element it has to have the same atomic number and a different mass number. This means 3116X and 3216X are the same element.
Atoms of the same element are alike and always have the same number of protons in their nuclei.
An element is a substance that consists of atoms that are all of the same type, meaning that they all have the same number of protons in their nuclei. A compound is a substance consisting of molecules, each consisting of the same atoms connected in the same way.
It means the same as result or compound or substance :L
It is an element because it only contains one type of atom, meaning all the atoms have the same number of protons.
Absolutely. The term "element" in science basically means "a grouping of the SAME kind of atom," meaning in gold you will only have gold atoms.
A pure element (on an atomic scale) is a series of the same atoms (same amount of electrons). Elements in compounds are fused to each other meaning that their amount of electrons may have changed and they may have a different charge.
A pure element (on an atomic scale) is a series of the same atoms (same amount of electrons). Elements in compounds are fused to each other meaning that their amount of electrons may have changed and they may have a different charge.
No, it is covalent as it contains two atoms of the same element, meaning no difference in electronegativity.
Actually, some atoms have different variants for the same type of element. They have the same atomic number (meaning the same number of protons) but a different atomic mass (meaning a different number of neutrons). This kind of species of atoms is called isotopes. Please see the related links for details.
Carbon. Diamond and graphite (pencil lead) are allotropes of carbon, meaning different atomic arrangements of the same element. They are also both covalent network solids.
No, isotopes of the same element are of different weight.
yes because the atoms in the specific element have the same properties as that element. :D
Restate the question: it makes no sense; same element as what?