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Neon has the atomic number 10 which means it has 10 protons, it cannot have 12. Different isotopes of an element have the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons. There are three stable isotopes of neon.
two elements having the same number of protons, but differeing in the number of neutrons; thus having slightly different molecular weights are called isotopes of that element...ex. Boron-10(has an atomic mass of 10.012937u) and Boron- 11(has an atomic mass of 11.009305u) Each isotope of Boron has 5 protons, they differed in the number of neutrons which gave each a slightly different atomic mass. note:if two elements have a different number of protons they are no longer the same element or even isotopes of that element..the amount of protons is like a way to identify which atom is which.
Isotopes must have the same atomic number, which is the number of protons. The atomic mass, which is the total number of protons and neutrons, varies for the different isotopes. so it should have different mass numbers..
no atomic radius is not the same as atomic mass because it is 10 to the power of 10 and atomic mass is different for different elements
The Atomic Number of the element is equal to the number of electrons. Also, the number of protons is also equal to the Atomic number; so the number of protons and electrons in any given element is the same!
Neon has the atomic number 10 which means it has 10 protons, it cannot have 12. Different isotopes of an element have the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons. There are three stable isotopes of neon.
Because they are all the same type of atoms. Oxygen is an element. If you have 10 oxygen atoms, they will all behave like oxygen, since they are the same element.
That is the same as asking 15C10 which is 3003. It is 15! divided by (15-10)!(10!) This is 15x14x13x12x11 divided by 5x4x3x2x1 or divided by 120 or 360360=3003
two elements having the same number of protons, but differeing in the number of neutrons; thus having slightly different molecular weights are called isotopes of that element...ex. Boron-10(has an atomic mass of 10.012937u) and Boron- 11(has an atomic mass of 11.009305u) Each isotope of Boron has 5 protons, they differed in the number of neutrons which gave each a slightly different atomic mass. note:if two elements have a different number of protons they are no longer the same element or even isotopes of that element..the amount of protons is like a way to identify which atom is which.
10 over 6, which is the same as (10 x 9 x 8 x 7 x 6 x 5) / (1 x 2 x 3 x 4 x 5 x 6).
No. Lithium is an element with atomic number 3 (or 3 protons) and neon is an element with atomic number 10 (or 10 protons). Both are not same.
It's not a prefix but a subscripted postfix '10'Example: decane C10H22 with 10 atoms of the same element Carbon (and 22 H's)
That depends. 10 lbs. of bricks will fall at the same speed as 10 lbs. of feathers. Meanwhile, a cinderblock will fall far faster than a single feather. If two things are the same weight, they will usually fall at the same speed. If two things are different weights, they will fall at different speeds. ^ This only takes effect when wind resistance is NOT added.
The atomic number is the number of protons in an atom. The number of protons in an atom is what gives the atom its elemental identity. The number of neutrons can change resulting in different isotopes of the same element. The number of electrons can change, resulting in different valence states of the same element. If the number of protons changes, then an atom of neon is no longer neon. So the atomic number of neon is always 10, because neon always has 10 protons.
Different atoms of the same element possessing different atomic masses but having same atomic number are known as Isotopes. Since the isotopic atoms have the same atomic number, they must contain an equal number of protons. As their atomic masses are different, there must be a difference in the number of neutrons they possess. They will show similar chemical properties but their physical properties will be different due to different masses.
The acceleration due to gravity does not depend on the mass. For example, if you have two objects, one of which has 10 times the mass of another, it will be attracted with 10 times the force; however, it will also have 10 times the inertia, so the acceleration will be the same.
Isotopes must have the same atomic number, which is the number of protons. The atomic mass, which is the total number of protons and neutrons, varies for the different isotopes. so it should have different mass numbers..