Not if more elements are discovered.
Periods have same shells. There are 7 periods in periodic table.
In the periodic table elements having valence electrons in the same orbital are said to be placed in the same block.There are four blocks in the periodic table s, p, d and f.
Elements in the same family on the periodic table have similar chemical properties and characteristics due to their shared number of valence electrons. They are located in the same column on the periodic table and have the same number of valence electrons, which influences their reactivity and bonding behavior. The main group elements in the periodic table are organized into families based on their electron configuration, with each family exhibiting similar properties.
They are the same
Elements in the same family (group) on the periodic table have the same number of valence electrons and hence they have similar properties and reactivities.
A period on the periodic table is a row.This is the horizontal section of the periodic table.
In the same column.
Elements are arranged on the periodic table based on their atomic number, which is the number of protons in their nucleus. This arrangement groups elements with similar properties in columns called groups or families, while elements in the same period have the same number of electron shells.
yes, families and groups the same meaning in the periodic table.
Periods have same shells. There are 7 periods in periodic table.
No, absolutely not. The ion still has the same number of protons, which determines the element's position on the periodic table. The periodic table always stays the same.
a family of the periodic table is like a group of elements of the same type.
In the periodic table elements having valence electrons in the same orbital are said to be placed in the same block.There are four blocks in the periodic table s, p, d and f.
No, look at any periodic table and you will see they are arranged in order of increasing mass.
There is a group of elements in the periodic table as the elements with same properties are clubbed together.
Look on a periodic table. If you have different isotopes then you need to multiply the mass number and atomic number and then find the average of them and you'll have the average atomic mass which is the same as on the periodic table. The location of the mass number on a periodic table depends but it's normally the one with a decimal.
All of the others in the same row of the Periodic Table as sodium.