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Nitrogen has three stable isotopes. Namely they are nitrogen-14, nitrogen-15 and nitrogen-16.
The most stable isotopes of nitrogen are 14N and 15N.
The most common stable isotopes of nitrogen are nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15. Nitrogen-14 is the most abundant, making up about 99.6% of naturally occurring nitrogen, while nitrogen-15 makes up the remaining 0.4%.
n14 + n15
Nitrogen has two stable isotopes: N-14 and N-15 and 14 radioactive isotopes.
The natural isotopes of nitrogen are stable; for the synthetic radioactive isotopes of nirogen see the link below.
copper has 2 stable isotopes
No, there are many stable isotopes.
It has 10
Dubnium is an artificial chemical element and hasn't stable isotopes.
it has 3 stable isotopes
No, most isotopes are not stable. Many isotopes are radioactive and decay over time, releasing radiation in the process. Only a few isotopes are stable and do not undergo radioactive decay.