These isotopes have a different number of neutrons.
B. Isotopes of Nitrogen. Isotopes are atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons. In this case, the resulting atoms will be isotopes of nitrogen because they have gained neutrons.
No, they are isotopes with the same atomic mass. But they are isotopes of different elements and so are very different from on another. For example nitrogen-16 and nitrogen-14 are isotopes of the same element.
They have the same number of protons in the atomic nucleus.
An isotope is an atom of an element. Isotopes are atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons. However, all atoms of the same element have the same number of protons.
Carbon and nitrogen isotopes are not isotopes of each other. They are different elements with their own set of isotopes. Carbon isotopes include carbon-12, carbon-13, and carbon-14, while nitrogen isotopes include nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15.
Nitrogen-14 has 7 protons, 7 electrons, and 7 neutrons. Nitrogen-15 has 7 protons, 7 electrons and 8 neutrons. So, the only way they differ is in the NUMBER OF NEUTRONS.
The natural isotopes of nitrogen are stable; for the synthetic radioactive isotopes of nirogen see the link below.
Fluorine has 7 valence electrons, (9 altogether) and ten neutrons.
Nitrogen isotope of nitrogen are used as tracers in agricultural studies (efficiency of fertilizers), leaks detection in nuclear reactors, etc.
Nitrogen has three stable isotopes. Namely they are nitrogen-14, nitrogen-15 and nitrogen-16.
Isotopes are species of atoms having same atomic no. but different atomic masses. So an isotope has either lesser or more neutrons than the usual atom of the element ( often called the most abundant isotope).
The atomic number of nitrogen is 7. Since nitrogen is a naturally occurring element, it's not specifically "radioactive nitrogen." However, nitrogen can form radioactive isotopes such as nitrogen-13 or nitrogen-16 through processes like radioactive decay or nuclear reactions.