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isotope
(redirected from Isotopy)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

isotope

One of two or more atoms that have the same atomic number (same number of protons), but which contain a different number of neutrons, thus differing in their relative atomic mass. They may be stable or radioactive (as a radioisotope), naturally occurring, or synthesized. For example, hydrogen has the isotopes 2H (deuterium) and 3H (tritium). The term was coined by English chemist Frederick Soddy, a pioneer researcher in atomic disintegration.

Elements at the top of the periodic table have atoms with few protons and roughly the same number of neutrons. These elements have at least one, often several stable isotopes. The stable isotopes of oxygen include 16O, 17O, and 18O; those of carbon include 12C and 14C. Elements with high atomic mass numbers (those heavier than iron) have many more protons and require large numbers of neutrons to shield the repulsion between their positive charges. These elements often come with a whole range of isotopes, most of which are prone to radioactive decay. Examples are 238U (uranium-238) and 60Co (cobalt-60). Elements from number 84 (polonium) onwards have no stable isotopes, that is, all their nuclei will decay, although the decay may be very slow.



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The shift from one isotopy to another seems, once again, to be obviously synonymous with the concepts and patterns used by other contemporary and later authors when speaking about humour or metaphor, like Koestler's clash of the two bisociated planes of meaning, or Raskin's (1985) transition from one intersecting or opposed script to another, or Coulson's semantic leaps and frame-shifting (e.
If we call two elements isotopes if they differ only in the last term as described above, then the 92 above elements include 20 pairs of isotopes, plus 52 other elements, making a total of 72 elements up to isotopy.
Isotopy in its original context was primarily a means of accounting for the semantic consistency of a text by linking all its parts in a hierarchy of significance.
 
 
 
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