No.
Carbon and Nitrogen are different elements themselves. They don't contain any element within them.
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.
Carbon 13 is stable; it does not decay into carbon 14. Since carbon 14 has a greater mass, such a decay would be impossible.
Carbon is a non metallic element. Mass number of it is 12.
your bumb
Isotopes of an element have nuclei with the same number of protons (the same atomic number) but different numbers of neutrons. Therefore, isotopes have different mass numbers, which give the total number of nucleons-the number of protons plus neutrons. Many, if not all, elements have isotopes. Most are unstable, i.e. radioactive, due to interactions involving the weak force. IN SHORT:Isotopes have the same atomic number but different atomic mass. For example: Carbon-12, for instance, has 6 protons and 6 neutrons. Carbon-13, an isotope of carbon, has 6 protons and 7 neutrons.
No elements have the same average mass, but some isotopes are the same mass as other elements, For example Carbon-13 (an isotope of carbon) has the same mass as nitrogen-13 (which is also an isotope of nitrogen).
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.
Carbon-13 is a stable isotope of carbon, containing 6 protons and 7 neutrons in its nucleus. It is naturally occurring, accounting for about 1% of all carbon atoms. Carbon-13 is commonly used in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to study the structure and composition of organic molecules.
Isotopes are different forms of the same element that have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. This affects the atomic mass of the element, but not its chemical properties. For example, carbon-12, carbon-13, and carbon-14 are isotopes of carbon.
They do not. All atoms of an element have the same number of protons otherwise they would not be that element. Taking carbon as an example, most carbon has 6 neutrons and is known as Carbon-12. There are traces of Carbon-13 with 7 neutrons and even traces of Carbon-14 with 8 neutrons present. So all the atoms in a lump of carbon would not have the same number of neutrons.
Carbon 13 is stable; it does not decay into carbon 14. Since carbon 14 has a greater mass, such a decay would be impossible.
Neutrons. The number of protons is ALWAYS the same for the same element. Different forms of the same element, called isotopes, differ in the number of neutrons only and will react chemically in exactly the same way.
No, carbon-12, carbon-13, and carbon-14 are not different elements; they are isotopes of the same element, carbon. They all have the same number of protons (6), which defines them as carbon, but they differ in the number of neutrons—carbon-12 has 6 neutrons, carbon-13 has 7, and carbon-14 has 8. This variation in neutron number results in different atomic masses and some differing properties, particularly in terms of stability and radioactivity.
isotopes of carbon are atomic no. 6 mass 12 , atomic no.6 mass 13 , atomic no. 6 mass 14
Carbon is a non metallic element. Mass number of it is 12.
No, none of two elements in any group have the same number of neutrons. But there are such elements across a period, and they are known as isotones. Some examples are; carbon-12 and nitrogen-13 oxygen-18 and fluorine-19 phosphorus-31 and sulfur-32
its group 13 right after the carbon family.