Yes, but they have varying amounts of neutrons.
The numbers of protons and electrons are identical.
By the numbers of protons
Isotopes have same number of electrons. They have same number of protons, so their atomic numbers are same. They have different numbers of neutrons resulting different mass numbers.
Isotopes of an atom have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. This causes isotopes to have different atomic masses. The chemical properties of isotopes are usually identical, but physical properties such as nuclear stability and radioactive decay can vary.
When an element has different isotopes, the feature that changes is the number of neutrons in the nucleus. Isotopes of an element have the same number of protons (which defines the element) but varying numbers of neutrons, resulting in different atomic masses. This variation can affect the stability and radioactive properties of the isotopes, but the chemical behavior remains largely the same due to the identical electron configuration.
The numbers of protons and electrons are identical.
The answer you are looking for is "isotopes" HOWEVER, please note you CAN NOT HAVE 2 elements with the same number of PROTONS. This is because the number of protons DEFINES an element. Isotopes are the SAME element but with differing numbers of neutrons.
Isotopes of an element have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei. This results in different atomic masses for each isotope. Despite the difference in atomic mass, isotopes of an element have similar chemical properties due to their identical electron configurations.
Not; the number of protons in isotopes is identical; only the number of neutrons is different.
The number of protons (and electrons in a neutral atom) is identical. The number of neutrons is different for each isotope.
By the numbers of protons
Isotopes have same number of electrons. They have same number of protons, so their atomic numbers are same. They have different numbers of neutrons resulting different mass numbers.
Isotopes of an atom have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. This causes isotopes to have different atomic masses. The chemical properties of isotopes are usually identical, but physical properties such as nuclear stability and radioactive decay can vary.
They have the same number of protons in the nucleus and same number of electrons surrounding the nucleus.
When an element has different isotopes, the feature that changes is the number of neutrons in the nucleus. Isotopes of an element have the same number of protons (which defines the element) but varying numbers of neutrons, resulting in different atomic masses. This variation can affect the stability and radioactive properties of the isotopes, but the chemical behavior remains largely the same due to the identical electron configuration.
The atomic number (number of protons) is identical.
The isotopes of the same element have an identical number of protons and electrons; the number of neutrons is different.