answersLogoWhite

0

Yes it is true. All isotopes differ in the number of neutrons only.

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

How does a neutron star differ from a main sequence star?

A neutron star is a stellar remnant


How does an electron differ from a neutron?

An electron has a negative charge to it, whilst a neutron has a neutral charge to it.


What particles differ in number in isotopes of the same element?

neutron


How does electron differ from a neutro?

An electron bears a negative charge, a neutron has no charge.A neutron is about 2,000 times as massive as an electron.Neutrons exist in atomic nuclei, electrons orbit nuclei.


How do neutron stars differ from super giants stars?

I suggest you do some reading on both, to get an idea what a neutron star really is, and what a supergiant is. For a start, some differences are: their diameter; their density; the fact that a neutron star no longer produces any energy.


Does an element have only one kind of atom?

Yes, while neutron count can differ and some properties.


How do neutron stars differ from super giant stars?

I suggest you do some reading on both, to get an idea what a neutron star really is, and what a supergiant is. For a start, some differences are: their diameter; their density; the fact that a neutron star no longer produces any energy.


Isotopes of the same element differ in the number of what-?

Only the neutron number is different, same proton and electron number.


How do isotopes H-3 and H-2 differ?

Hydrogen-1 isotopes have one proton and no neutrons. Hydrogen-2 isotopes have one proton and one neutron.


Isotopes of hydrogen differ in what?

Isotopes (of hydrogen) differ in the number of neutrons in the nucleus of the atoms.


How does an electron differ from neutron?

Neutrons are neutral sub atomic particles found in the nucleus of an atom (along with positively charged protons). Electrons are negatively charged sub atomic particles that are revolving around the nucleus of an atom. The mass of neutron is 1 amu and the mass of electron is about 1837 times less than that of neutron.


How do neutron stars differ from other giant stars?

A neutron star is the "end of the line" for a giant star that exploded as a supernova. The material in a neutron star is packed so densely that a chunk of it the size of a cigarette package would weigh thousands of tons. It spins rapidly, at a steady rate (they are sometimes called "radio beacon stars").