Isotope
Isotopes, which are atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons.
Atoms of the same element cannot have different numbers of protons. Different numbers of protons mean different elements. An atom with the a different number of neutrons is called an isotope.
Every atom of the same element is also categorized by its number of neutrons. An atom with a certain number of neutrons is an "isotope." Two atoms of the same element (same quantity of protons) can be different isotopes (different quantity of neutrons). Some isotopes are unstable, so most stable isotopes of an element are withing a range of a few numbers. For example, stable isotopes of carbon are Carbon-12 and Carbon-13.
The large numbers in front of some formulas are called coefficients. They represent the factor by which a particular element or compound should be multiplied in the chemical equation.
The Proton number defines the element, so there cannot be two atoms of the same element with different proton numbers, because they will be, by definition, different elements. Neutron numbers can differ though. When one element has different neutron configurations, these are called Isotopes.
Is called an Isotope.
An element has a small case in the center called the nucleus. Inside the nucleus contains protons an nuetrons. Protons have a positive charge and nuetrons have a negative charge. On the outside and are energy levels that have electrons and are negatively charged
Not isomers, Isotopes
Isotopes, which are atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons.
They are called isotopes.
They are called isotopes.
It's called an isotope.
They are isotopes of that element, they have different neutron numbers.
what are diffrent types of tissues that are working together called
Atoms of the same element can have different numbers of neutrons; the different possible versions of each element are called isotopes. For example, the most common isotope of hydrogen has no neutrons at all; there's also a hydrogen isotope called deuterium, with one neutron, and another, tritium, with two neutrons.
mass number = protons + nuetrons
Isotopes