Autunite is a mineral containing Uranium and is therefore radioactive.
Uranium minerals as pitchblende, uraninite, carnotite, autunite, davidite, etc. or as a secondary product from the mining of gold, vanadium, phosphates.
Yes. A radioactive atom is a radioactive atom. If that atom exists as a single atom and is uncombined and it is radioactive, it's radioactive. If that same atom is chemically combined with another or other atoms, it's still radioactive. It's just that simple.
All uranium compounds are radioactive to some degree.
Zirconium does have radioactive isotopes, but the main ones used in industry are not radioactive.
As radium is radioactive, radium chloride would also be radioactive. Any compounds make with any radioactive material are radioactive, and they cannot be "not" radioactive. Radioactive material doesn't really care if it is "alone" or in compound; it will be radioactive in any case.
copper
Rollin C Vickers has written: 'An occurrence of autunite' -- subject(s): Petrology, Autunite
Autunite is a yellow mineral with tetragonal crystals, chemical formula Ca(UO2)2(PO4)2·10-12H2O.
It is an ore of uranium.
It is an ore of uranium.
A zeunerite is a mineral with tetragonal crystals, belonging to the autunite group.
Common minerals of uranium are: pitchblende, carnotite, autunite, coffinite etc.
Uranium minerals are: pitchblende, carnotite, autunite, coffinite, etc.
Uranium minerals as pitchblende, uraninite, carnotite, autunite, davidite, etc. or as a secondary product from the mining of gold, vanadium, phosphates.
Examples are: uraninite (pitchblende), carnotite, rutherfordite, coffinite, uranopilite, uranophane, autunite, torbernite, upalite, tyuyamunite, davidite.
"Radioactive."
non radioactive element