it will be same as the atomic number
neutrons in order to be stable. The number of protons determines the element's identity, while the stability of the nucleus is influenced by the balance of protons and neutrons. Isotopes can have different numbers of neutrons while maintaining the same number of protons.
An Isotope of an element is an atom that has the same number of protons, (number of protons is the defining feature of an element) but different number of neutrons.Because The mass number is the sum of protons and neutrons, different isotopes have different mass numbers.
Isotopes have same number of electrons. They have same number of protons, so their atomic numbers are same. They have different numbers of neutrons resulting different mass numbers.
Isotopes have the same number of protons and electrons; the number of neutrons is different.
Atoms of the same element cannot have different numbers of protons. Different numbers of protons mean different elements. An atom with the a different number of neutrons is called an isotope.
On average, in any atom, you will have the same number of electrons and protons.
All atoms of the same element have the same number of protons. Atoms of different elements have different numbers of protons. The number of protons determines the element.
Isotopes are atoms of the same element with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. This results in isotopes having the same atomic number but different atomic masses.
Two atoms with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons are called "isotopes".
An isotone is a group of atomic nuclei that have the same neutron number but different atomic numbers. This means isotones have the same number of neutrons but different numbers of protons. Isotones are different from isotopes, which have the same atomic number but different numbers of neutrons.
as the atomic number of the element
Yes, it is correct.
it will be same as the atomic number
Isotopes of an element have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. For example, carbon-12 and carbon-14 are isotopes of carbon with 6 protons but 6 and 8 neutrons, respectively.
neutrons in order to be stable. The number of protons determines the element's identity, while the stability of the nucleus is influenced by the balance of protons and neutrons. Isotopes can have different numbers of neutrons while maintaining the same number of protons.
Yes. Isotopes have the same atomic number because all of their atoms have the same number of protons. They have different mass numbers because their atoms have different numbers of neutrons, and mass number is the sum of the numbers of protons and neutrons.