What Is an Isotope? Atoms, Mass, and Examples
Why does the periodic table list chlorine's mass as 35.5 when you can't have half a particle? The answer is isotopes — and once you understand them, a lot of small mysteries about atoms suddenly make sense. The short answer: isotopes are atoms of the same element that have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons . Same element, different mass. A quick atom refresher Every atom is built from three particles: Protons — positive charge; the number of them defines which element you have (this is the atomic number). Neutrons — no charge; they add mass. Electrons — negative charge; they orbit the nucleus. The key fact: protons define the element . Change the protons and you have a different element entirely. What makes an isotope Isotopes come from changing the neutron count while keeping the protons the same. Because the protons don't change, it's still the same element — it just weighs a little more or less. We label isotopes by thei...