1. Radium has 45 isotopes and nuclear isomers.
2. Radium has no known today allotropes.
Radium has today 33 isotopes and 12 nuclear isomers.
Radium has today 33 isotopes and 12 nuclear isomers.
If they are in different physical form they are ALLOTROPES. If they are in different atomic form they are ISOTOPES. e.g. Allotropes [ Graphite, diamond and buckyballs* buckminster Fullerene) are allotropes of carbon. They appear different because the arrangment of the atomis is different. Isotopes Carbon 12 , Carbon-13, Carbon-14 are isotopes of carbon , because they have a different number of neutrons in the nucleus.
The first name was radium; some isotopes had in the past other names.
See the link below for the masses of all radium isotopes.
Radium has today 33 isotopes and 12 nuclear isomers.
Radium has today 33 isotopes and 12 nuclear isomers.
If they are in different physical form they are ALLOTROPES. If they are in different atomic form they are ISOTOPES. e.g. Allotropes [ Graphite, diamond and buckyballs* buckminster Fullerene) are allotropes of carbon. They appear different because the arrangment of the atomis is different. Isotopes Carbon 12 , Carbon-13, Carbon-14 are isotopes of carbon , because they have a different number of neutrons in the nucleus.
Radium, by a big margin. Radium has no isotopes that are not radioactive, but no naturally occurring isotopes of potassium or sodium are radioactive.
Possible use of radium isotopes for the radiotherapy of some cancers.
The first name was radium; some isotopes had in the past other names.
See the link below for the masses of all radium isotopes.
See the link below for the masses of all radium isotopes.
Radium is a natural chemical element, an alkali earth metal; but some isotopes of radium can be obtained artificially.
It isn't used for anything anymore--they have better, safer isotopes to do the things radium was once used for.
Platinum does not seem to have discovered allotropes; instead it has isotopes which are the nearest thing from what I could discover online. Not only that but platinum is so rare no one really has enough money to test it enough to discover whether it does have allotropes are not.
either allotropes, isotopes, nanotubes or polymers either allotropes, isotopes, nanotubes or polymers