Yes, you may say that.
Isotopes. eg U235 and U238. Both Uranium, atomic number 92, bur different isotopes.
The isotopes of an element have the same number of protons, but different numbers of neutrons.
Answer this question… The number of neutrons
Same number of protons (=atomic number in the P.S.)Different number of neutronsDifferent in MASS NUMBER (=the sum of the number of protons AND neutrons, and also roughly equal to the atomic mass)fr eg isotopes of hydrogen are: H1 H2 H3their mass numbers are different but their charge number or atomic number (no.of protons) is the same. that is why isotopes have different physical but same chemical properties.
The two notations represent atoms that are isotopes of the same element is 121 Sn and 119 Sn. The atomic mass of an element is defined as the weighted average mass of that elements naturally occurring isotopes.
Almost all the elements have different isotopes having same atomic no but different mass no or neutrons.
Isotopes have different numbers of electrons, but not different atomic numbers (numbers of protons) or they'd be different elements.
Isotopes of elements are atoms with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. This causes isotopes of the same element to have different atomic masses. Isotopes can be stable or unstable, with unstable isotopes undergoing radioactive decay.
Isotopes. eg U235 and U238. Both Uranium, atomic number 92, bur different isotopes.
Isotopes
Isotopes of the same element with different atomic masses are placed in the same position on the periodic table because they have the same number of protons and electrons. The atomic number, which determines an element's position on the periodic table, is the same for all isotopes of an element.
Yes, and they are called isotopes.
During some radioactive explosion/exposure the atoms combine and if they stay stable they from with extra amounts of protons. Isotopes are when two or more elements have the same number of protons, but different number of neutrons.
We call these different "flavors" of an element the isotopes of that element.
Because most naturally occurring elements are a mixture of isotopes, each having a different atomic mass. These individual isotopic atomic masses must be combined accounting for the amount of each isotope of the element is present to get a weighted average atomic mass.
Isotopes are atoms of an element having different number of electrons.
If two atoms are isotopes, it means they have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. Thus, they have the same atomic numbers, but different atomic masses.