A nuclear reaction of some sort ( not necessarily violent blast). there are various Isotopes of some elements- with differing atomic numbers.
When the number of protons in an atom changes, the identity of the element changes because the number of protons determines the element's atomic number. If the number of protons changes, the atom becomes a different element. This process is called nuclear fusion or fission.
Atoms of the same element have the same number of protons because the number of protons defines the identity of the element. However, isotopes of an element can have different numbers of neutrons which doesn't change the element's identity but can affect its atomic mass. This variation in neutron number creates isotopes with different mass numbers but the same atomic number.
What differentiates one element from another (like Hydrogen from Helium) is the number of protons in the nucleus. When protons are added (as happens in nuclear fusion) or subtracted (nuclear fission), the element transmutes into another element. When the number of Protons are changed, both the Electrons and Neutron (numbers) will change too. Protons are paired with electrons. Protons + Electrons = Neutrons, thus reinforcing that both the Electrons and Neutrons will change when the number of Protons has.
It become another element.Changes of this nature occur in radioactivity,nuclear fission(reduction of proton) and in nuclear fusion(addition.eg-Two hydrogen atoms fuse together form helium as ocur in sun).
i think it would turn into gallium 65 isotope assuming the zinc is zinc 64. it would probably be an cation of 1+ charge. it is unlikely that something like this would happen in nature through. hope this helped :)
The element transforms itself into another element because each element have a specific number of protons. If the number of protons changes, the element changes as well. The number of protons in an atom defines it elemental identity, so if the number of protons in an element increases by one it becomes another element. Although this reference doesn't really provide a direct answer, it does provide additional information that might be of interest: http://www.answers.com/topic/proton
When the number of protons in an atom changes, the identity of the element changes because the number of protons determines the element's atomic number. If the number of protons changes, the atom becomes a different element. This process is called nuclear fusion or fission.
Changing the number of neutrons in an atom does not change the element it belongs to because the element is determined by the number of protons in the nucleus. Changing the number of neutrons would result in an isotope of the same element, not a new element.
Yes. Atoms with a different number of neutrons are called isotopes of that atom, but a variation in the number of neutrons does not change what the atom is.
Atoms of the same element have the same number of protons because the number of protons defines the identity of the element. However, isotopes of an element can have different numbers of neutrons which doesn't change the element's identity but can affect its atomic mass. This variation in neutron number creates isotopes with different mass numbers but the same atomic number.
The change described is nuclear transmutation. We see this with beta decay, which is a form or radioactive decay. Use the link below to the related question to check it out and lean more.These are known as isotopes.
The element becomes a new element becuase the atomic number would change. For example if you added a proton to Hydrogen-atomic number 1, it would become helium-atomic number 2
What differentiates one element from another (like Hydrogen from Helium) is the number of protons in the nucleus. When protons are added (as happens in nuclear fusion) or subtracted (nuclear fission), the element transmutes into another element. When the number of Protons are changed, both the Electrons and Neutron (numbers) will change too. Protons are paired with electrons. Protons + Electrons = Neutrons, thus reinforcing that both the Electrons and Neutrons will change when the number of Protons has.
If an atom were to change the number of protons it had than it would change the atomic number and therefore become a different element. Radioactive decay is one example of this, for example, alpha decay is when a radioactive nucleus emits an alpha particle (2 protons + 2 neutrons) and in doing so, becomes a nucleus of a different element. Polonium-212 decays to Lead-208 in this way.
No, each element has a unique atomic number that corresponds to the number of protons in its nucleus. Changing the number of protons would change the element itself.
The mass number would be different for different isotopes of the same element.
It become another element.Changes of this nature occur in radioactivity,nuclear fission(reduction of proton) and in nuclear fusion(addition.eg-Two hydrogen atoms fuse together form helium as ocur in sun).