Yes, one of its isotopes, tridium, which has an atomic weight of two and an extra two neutrons its its nucleus, is highly radioactive, as well as rare.
Hydrogen is not radioactive; its two most common isotopes are stable.
No. Not hydrogen itself. However there are a total of three isotopes of hydrogen - Hydrogen, Deuterium, and Tritium. Tritium is radioactive
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a radioactive isotope of hydrogen with a mass approximately three times that of the common protium isotope
It may be Magnesium Tritide, Which is a form of Magnesium hydride, containing Radioactive hydrogen(or Tritium) in place of hydrogen. Its formula can also be written as Mg3H2
Hydrogen is not radioactive; its two most common isotopes are stable.
Usually not, but all elements have radioactive isotopes.
Hydrogen has one very rare radioactive isotope: hydrogen-3, commonly known as tritium; also some artificial radioactive isotopes as 4H, 5H, 6H.
Some examples are deuterium and tritium which are radioactive isotopes of hydrogen.
Hydrogen is not radioactive.
tritium
No. Not hydrogen itself. However there are a total of three isotopes of hydrogen - Hydrogen, Deuterium, and Tritium. Tritium is radioactive
Some examples are deuterium and tritium which are radioactive isotopes of hydrogen.
One proton is in tritium, a radioactive isotope of hydrogen with two neutrons.
Hydrogen
Tritium, it is also radioactive.
The hydrogen bomb basically it is the deuterium bomb which is a radioactive isotope of hydrogen.