The element Californium is reactive.
The Pauling electronegativity of californium is 1,3 and californium is a sufficiently reactive metal.Californium can react with the majority of nonmetals.
All the isotopes of californium are radioactive, artificial and unstable.
From what I have read, it is fairly reactive and does form compounds but not explosively. It does have biohazard properties.
Californium has a moderate chemical reactivity - on the Pauling scale the electronegativity is 1,3 (this value is practically similar for all the actinoids).
reactive
Apart, Oxygen and Hydrogen are not stable, but when they combine they become stable, and when something is stable, it is not reactive (unless you force it to be)
Apart, Oxygen and Hydrogen are not stable, but when they combine they become stable, and when something is stable, it is not reactive (unless you force it to be)
Well i think it is reactive
fluorine stable fluorine diatomic is unstable
they are stable
Argon is stable. Calcium is reactive. There is no compound that forms between argon and calcium.
The atomic number of californium is 98. The atomic mass of the most stable isotope - 251Cf - is (251) after IUPAC.