No, different atoms make chemical bonds in different ways. They may form chemical bonds by either loosing or accepting electrons, sharing or by mutual sharing electrons.
All elements are composed of atoms, which are the building blocks of matter. Each element is characterized by the number of protons in the nucleus of its atoms, determining its unique chemical properties. The periodic table organizes elements based on their atomic number, showing the variety of elements found in nature.
An element is composed of atoms all with the same proton number(they are the same type). The only way the atoms in an element can vary is in the number of neutrons they have.
There are no elements named after places since an element is atoms which are all the same not a mixture of two types of atoms nor a compound which is more than three.
An atom is a structure of protons, neutrons and electrons. A collection of atoms that all share the same number of protons are all given the same element name (i.e. all carbon atoms have exactly 6 protons, and all helium atoms have 2). a compound is a collection of atoms of different elements that are bonded together. A good example of this is water, which is made of two Hydrogen atoms and one Oxygen atom bound together.
No, different samples of an element can have varying atomic masses due to the presence of isotopes. Isotopes are atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons, leading to different atomic masses.
No, Dalton's atomic theory did not include the idea that all atoms of all elements are the same size. Instead, he proposed that atoms of different elements have different sizes and weights.
No, Dalton did not say that all atoms are the same size. Instead, Dalton proposed that all elements are composed of indivisible particles called atoms, and that atoms of different elements have different sizes and properties.
All hydrogen atoms are the same but they are different from the atoms of other elements.
Elements
Elements are not mixture of all. An element entirely of atoms of the same type.
It was proposed by John Dalton in his atomic theory.
All elements are composed of atoms, which are the building blocks of matter. Each element is characterized by the number of protons in the nucleus of its atoms, determining its unique chemical properties. The periodic table organizes elements based on their atomic number, showing the variety of elements found in nature.
A substance in which all atoms are identical is called an element.
All elements are composed of atoms.All atoms of the same elementhave the same mass, and atomsof different elements have different masses.Compounds contain atoms of more than one element.In a particular compound, atoms of different elements aalways combine in the same way.
2 atoms of oxygen joined togetherBy mass, oxygen is the third-most abundant element in the universe, after hydrogen and helium. At STP, two atoms of the element bind to form dioxygen.
alls
No. Atoms differ in number of protons, neutrons and electrons.