Many minerals have these properties. Calcium for example is contained in both Limestone and in Dolomite. Indeed, calcium carbonate occurs in two forms - as Aragonite, and as Calcite. Iron is contained in both Hematite and in Iron Pyrites.
yes
For two isotopes to be of the same element it has to have the same atomic number and a different mass number. This means 3116X and 3216X are the same element.
Yes, a molecule can contain two atoms of the same element. For example, oxygen gas (O2) is a molecule composed of two oxygen atoms bonded together. In this case, both atoms are of the same element, oxygen.
All isotopes of an element have the same number of protons. When they are not ionic, they have the same number of electrons. And, for all practical purposes, they behave identically as chemicals. share most of the same physical properties, and chemical properties. They have different number of neutrons.
A compound contain elements chemically bonded.A mixture contain two or more compounds; they can be separated by physical procedures.An element is formed only from similar atoms, having the same number of protons.
yes
Yes, except that "element" should be pluralized; a compound always has at least two elements.
Isotopes are atoms of the same element which differ in the number of neutrons they contain. For example, helium-3 (3He), with two protons and one neutron in each nucleus, and helium-4 (4He), with two protons and two neutrons, are two different isotopes of helium. Nearly all elements found in nature are mixtures of several different isotopes. Although the chemical properties of isotopes of the same element are the same, the physical properties differ. The natural proportions of the isotopes are expressed in the form of an abundance ratio.
Two atoms of the same element can have different masses if they contain different numbers of neutrons. These are known as isotopes of the element. Isotopes have the same number of protons and electrons, but differing numbers of neutrons, which can slightly alter their atomic mass.
A compound contain elements chemically bonded.A mixture contain two or more compounds; they can be separated by physical procedures.An element is formed only from similar atoms, having the same number of protons.
No, the number of protons determines the element. Each element has a unique number of protons in its nucleus, which is what defines its identity. If two elements had the same number of protons, they would be the same element.
For two isotopes to be of the same element it has to have the same atomic number and a different mass number. This means 3116X and 3216X are the same element.
Yes, a molecule can contain two atoms of the same element. For example, oxygen gas (O2) is a molecule composed of two oxygen atoms bonded together. In this case, both atoms are of the same element, oxygen.
Two atoms are from the same element if they have the same number of protons in their nuclei. This is the defining characteristic that determines an element's identity. For example, all carbon atoms have 6 protons, so any two atoms with 6 protons are considered to be the same element, carbon.
Yes. If two atoms have the same number of protons then by definition they are the same element.
hydrogen and a second nonmetallic element
All isotopes of an element have the same number of protons. When they are not ionic, they have the same number of electrons. And, for all practical purposes, they behave identically as chemicals. share most of the same physical properties, and chemical properties. They have different number of neutrons.