Homogeneous refers to a mixture or substance in which the components are of the same kind or nature, without visible differences. This term is often used in chemistry to describe solutions or mixtures that are uniform in composition.
homogeneous is the awnser to your question
The chemical nature of an element is determined (mainly) by the electronic configuration in the outermost shells. However, most elements have isotopes - atomic configurations that have the same outer shells, but which may have a different number of neutrons in the atom core. This gives them the same chemical nature, but a different mass. Many isotopes are unstable in the long run - they will spontaneously disintegrate.
I think you mean heterogeneous and homogeneous. The first one means "made up of different/non-matching parts," and the second means "made up of a similar kind or nature, or having a uniform composition throughout."
elements are those which has same kind of atoms ex. oxygen, hydrogen etc. but when you join two elements you get a compound. ex. react oxygen and hydrogen you get water. elements are atoms of the same kind. so if you cut up a piece of sugar paper of different colours and 5 of you did this and 3 where squares and 2 where circles and you joined 2 circles together of the same size (roughly) and nearly same colour then they are an elements. but if they where different colour or sizes then they would just be a compound.
The substance in which one or more atoms have the same number of protons is called an element. Each element is defined by its unique number of protons, known as the atomic number. For example, all carbon atoms have six protons, categorizing them as carbon. Elements can exist as single atoms or as molecules consisting of two or more atoms of the same or different elements.
homogeneous is the awnser to your question
The same reason your mother doesn't.
all of the same or similar kind or nature
Homogenous? I know that's kind of generically speaking here...
similar
Elements are made of atoms. Each element is made up of the same kind of atoms, having the same atomic number.
No. there is only one, and it's nature and stats will always be the same.
It depends on the element. If only one isotope occurs in nature, then all the atoms in a pure element are the same. However, most elements have two or more stable isotopes, so that there will be more than one kind of atom in most samples of such elements.
homogeneous:composed of parts or elements that are all of the same kind: a homogeneous population.heterogeneous: different in kind; unlike; incongruous.
The chemical nature of an element is determined (mainly) by the electronic configuration in the outermost shells. However, most elements have isotopes - atomic configurations that have the same outer shells, but which may have a different number of neutrons in the atom core. This gives them the same chemical nature, but a different mass. Many isotopes are unstable in the long run - they will spontaneously disintegrate.
The chemical nature of an element is determined (mainly) by the electronic configuration in the outermost shells. However, most elements have isotopes - atomic configurations that have the same outer shells, but which may have a different number of neutrons in the atom core. This gives them the same chemical nature, but a different mass. Many isotopes are unstable in the long run - they will spontaneously disintegrate.
homogeneous:composed of parts or elements that are all of the same kind: a homogeneous population.heterogeneous: different in kind; unlike; incongruous.