Chemistry, asked by 31082006, 10 months ago

What are isotopes? why do they have separate places?​

Answers

Answered by simran7241
0

Explanation:

Isotopes are contain positive and negative charges....

they have separate places because of different experimental conditions...

Answered by Anonymous
1

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what is isotope?

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\huge\bf{\underline\orange{Isotopes}}

➡️ Isotope, one of two or more species of atoms of a chemical element with the same atomic number and position in the periodic table and nearly identical chemical behaviour but with different atomic masses and physical properties.

They are different in different places because of different experimental conditions.

Property:-

➡️ Different isotopes of an element have the same number of protons in the nucleus, giving them the same atomic number, but a different number of neutrons giving each elemental isotope a different atomic weight.

Isotopes Examples:-

➡️ Carbon-14 => A naturally occurring radioactive isotope of carbon having six protons and eight neutrons in the nucleus.

➡️ Iodine-131 => It is an isotope because it contains a different number of neutrons from the element iodine.

➡️ All elements have isotopes. There are two main types of isotopes: stable and unstable (radioactive). There are 254 known stable isotopes. All artificial isotopes are unstable and therefore radioactive.

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