Sodium-24, magnesium-25 and aluminium-26 atoms have 13 neutrons each.
The element with 13 neutrons is aluminum (symbol Al) which has an atomic number of 13.
Aluminum has 13 protons and 13 or 14 neutrons. Silicon has 14 protons, and 14 to 18 neutrons.
The atomic number of aluminum is 13, therefore there will be 13 protons.The number of neutrons equals the mass number minus the atomic number. For aluminum-25, that will be 25 - 13 = 12 neutrons.There will be 13 electrons in the neutral atom of aluminum, regardless of which isotope we are considering.
The number of protons identifies this element as aluminum, which has an atomic number of 13. The number of protons is an element's atomic number on the periodic table. Every element has its own unique atomic number which defines it as that element.
the element that has 8 neutrons is Oxygen
Two different isotopes of an element have different numbers of neutrons. That's what an isotope is. So, no, isotopes of an element can not have the same number of neutrons.
Aluminum has 13 protons and 13 or 14 neutrons. Silicon has 14 protons, and 14 to 18 neutrons.
12 neutrons are in the element sodium.
Sodium, Na, is the element that has eleven protons.
The element has 13 protons. So the element is aluminium. It has 15 neutrons (28 - 13 = 15) and the isotope is 13Al28
Not sure about an 'Osotope' Isotope: A variation in the number of neutrons in the core of an atom of a given element is an isotope of that element. Carbon has six protons in the core of the atom. Carbon-12 has six neutrons in its core. Carbon-13 has seven neutrons. Carbon-13 is an isotope of Carbon.
The atomic number of aluminum is 13, therefore there will be 13 protons.The number of neutrons equals the mass number minus the atomic number. For aluminum-25, that will be 25 - 13 = 12 neutrons.There will be 13 electrons in the neutral atom of aluminum, regardless of which isotope we are considering.
Aluminium is a natural chemical element; the atom contain 13 protons, 13 electrons and 14 neutrons.
neutrons
12 - 6 = 6 neutrons; the number of neutrons in an isotope is always the mass number minus the atomic number.
There are 118 neutrons in the element gold.
The number of neutrons is irrelevant for determining the element. 13 protons makes it aluminum. (The isotope of aluminum with 13 neutrons is unstable and radioactive, with a half-life of about 720,000 years.)
it is possible for a particular element to have various numbers of neutrons