The neutral atoms of all of the isotopes of the same element have
Answers
Answer:
In the problem, it was mentioned that the isotopes have a neutral charge. There is an equal number of protons to electrons if the atom is a neutrally-charged atom. Since the isotopes of the same element have the same number of protons, they will also have the same number of electrons to have a neutral charge.
Explanation:
The atoms of a chemical element can exist in different types that have very similar behavior, but weigh different amounts. These are called isotopes of the element. Atoms of the same element have the same number of protons, but different isotopes have different numbers of neutrons. Different isotopes of the same element have different masses because they have a different number of neutrons. Mass is the word for how much substance (or matter) something has. Things with different masses also have different weights.
Some isotopes are not stable so they change to another isotope or element by radioactive decay. These are called radioactive isotopes. Others are not radioactive. These are called stable isotopes.
Atoms of the same element have the same number of protons, which is called the atomic number. Different isotopes of an element have different numbers of neutrons. As a result, they also have different mass numbers, which is the number of protons plus the number of neutrons. An isotope is usually named by giving the element and the mass number. For example, the symbol for carbon is C and all carbon atoms have 6 protons. The most common isotope of carbon also has 6 neutrons, giving a mass number of 12, and it is written carbon-12 or 12C. The isotope of carbon that has 8 neutrons is written carbon-14 or 14C.
The word "isotope", meaning "at the same place", comes from the fact that isotopes of the same element are at the same place on the periodic table.
The neutral atoms of all of the isotopes of the same element have same mass.
Explanation:
- Isotopes have the same mass. They are two or more atoms that have the same atomic number.
- They have the same chemical properties but with different atomic masses and physical properties.
- The number of protons in their nuclei and the position of the periodic table remain the same.
- An isotope is written by the name of the element followed by a hyphen and mass number for example - carbon-12, Carbon-14
- When a chemical symbol is used C for carbon Standard notation is AZE where A is the mass number, Z is the atomic number and E for the element )