no
All the three elements are generally non-radioactive.
Yes. Any element which is radioactive may bond together with other molecules and atoms, just as much as any other non-radioactive element. However, radioactive elements would have a slightly greater pull towards their bonded species if their nucleus has more neutrons than what is normal for non-radioactive elements.
Nitrogen is a non metal element. Atomic number of it is 7.
A stable element is any non-radioactive element. All elements before element atomic number 84 (not including 84) - Polonium (Po) are stable elements.
You can identify a single replacement reaction because the reactants are a compound + an element. The products of a single replacement reaction are found by switching the element with another element in the compound. Metals switch with metals, non-metals switch with non-metals, and the most reactive element is always in the compound. A double replacement reaction can be identified because the reactants are always compound +compound. The products would also be two compounds but the elements would switch.
non radioactive element
Most (but not all) fusion products are non-radioactive. Virtually all fission products are strongly radioactive beta or gamma emitters.
yes
All the three elements are generally non-radioactive.
If you had a stable element 115, then by definition there would need to be at least one non-radioactive isotope. Stable elements are those that have at least one nonradioactive isotope. Of course, the other isotopes of the element could all be radioactive.
Synthetic elements are usually radioactive, but not necessarily so. It is conceivable for a non-radioactive neutral atom to be produced by a nuclear spallation reaction.
Carbon is non-radioactive excepting the isotope carbon-14.
Yes. Any element which is radioactive may bond together with other molecules and atoms, just as much as any other non-radioactive element. However, radioactive elements would have a slightly greater pull towards their bonded species if their nucleus has more neutrons than what is normal for non-radioactive elements.
Being radioactive californium is unstable.
well no elements were listed so I can't help you here
Nitrogen is a non metal element. Atomic number of it is 7.
All radioactive material has a characteristic half-life. This is a period during which half the matter from the original mass will have decayed into a daughter element. Either the daughter element is non-radioactive and therefore non-hazardous or it is radioactive and has its own half-life. The total radioactivity thus reduces over time and at some stage is deemed to reach a non-hazardous level.