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Through neutron bombardment. Muons produce neutrons and isotopes can be naturally stabilized via muons

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11y ago
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10y ago

due to the attraction of nucleous with electrones

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Q: How do isotopes gain stability?
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Related questions

What does band of stability for atomic nuclei refer to?

The band of stability contain stable isotopes.


What is the belt or band of stability for isotopes?

The belt of stability is a graph which help to identify unstable isotopes.See also this link.


How could Cl change to gain stability?

gain 1 electron


What is the importance of 2 different naturally occurring isotopes?

Depending on the stability of the isotopes and what we want to use it for, I say it gives us more variety for what we want to do with it in chemistry


What does the band of stability for atomic nuclei refer to?

The band of stability is a way of viewing which isotopes of the elements are stable. If you make a graph of number of neutrons versus number of protons of the stable isotopes, you find that the stable isotopes make a thick curved line on the graph which is called the "band of stability." The lighter elements tend to have the number of neutrons equal to number of protons. The heavier elements tend to have more neutrons than protons. The band of stability can help you to predict the behavior of unstable radioactive isotopes as well, because you can predict which decay process will move the element closer to the "band of stability" so it will have the ideal ratio of neutrons to protons.


What is the effect of feed back on gain?

A: Number one it provide stability for the amplifier or system. The greater the feedback the greater the stability but less gain. In other words gain is inversely related to feedback


How does country gain from international trade?

R&D, productivity, economic stability, military stability


Why are atomic numbers radioactive?

It has to do with the line of stability. Isotopes are made of an extra neutron, making the atomic mass greater. If the number of protons and neutrons on the graph that has the line of stability fall anywhere that's not on the line, it is unstable.


Why is the joining of atoms important?

to gain more stability


What do you know about an isotope?

Isotopes have same atomic number. They have different mass numbers. Their physical properties are different.


Stability range of an ideal op amp?

A; the stability is a function of gain assuming perfect matched input the range can be from a gain of practically Nil to close to open loop configuration


What is is the reason that atoms bond with other atoms?

To gain electronic stability (i.e. stability with respect to their electron configuration)