Hydrogen has three isotopes
Hydrogen-1 and hydrogen-2 isotopes are radioactively stable.
hydrogen
Hydrogen is not radioactive; its two most common isotopes are stable.
Chlorine has a lot of different isotopes but the 2 stable ones are chlorine 35 and chlorine 37
There are three known naturally occurring isotopes of hydrogen; hydrogen-1 with one proton and no neutrons, hydrogen-2 with one proton and one neutron, and hydrogen-3 with one proton and two neutrons.
Hydrogen-1 and hydrogen-2 isotopes are radioactively stable.
Hydrogen-1 and hydrogen-2 isotopes are radioactively stable.
3
Hydrogen has 1 unstable isotope, and 2 stable isotopes.
hydrogen
hydrogen
Hydrogen is not radioactive; its two most common isotopes are stable.
The isotopes protium (H-1) and deuterium (H-2) are stable; tritium (H-3) and artificial isotopes are unstable.
copper has 2 stable isotopes
It has 10
No, there are many stable isotopes.
Dubnium is an artificial chemical element and hasn't stable isotopes.