Yes, but it has a halflife of only 0.86 seconds.
The most common plutonium isotope is plutonium 239.
Lithium-7 is a stable isotope.
It is 94% of the time that lithium has 4 neutrons.
Since it has 3 protons, look up element #3 in the periodic table. That element happens to be lithium. The specific isotope is lithium-7, where 7 is the sum of 3 + 4. Finally, you may want to look up "Lithium" or "Isotopes of lithium" in the Wikipedia (or in some other online reference) to check whether such an isotope actually exists.
The only element with three protons is lithium.The isotope lithium-6, has 3 neutrons and is the rarer of the two stable isotopes of lithium.Most lithium is isotope lithium-7, containing 3 protons, 3 electrons, and 4 neutrons. It makes up about 92.5 percent of the lithium found on Earth.
Only in exceptional cases: hydrogen, helium, an isotope of lithium which accounts for 8% of lithium on earth, and an isotope of boron (20%).
Lithium-isotope 6 has 3 neutrons. Lithium-isotope 7 has 4.
8 electrons.
lithium-6
If it absorbs one neutron it becomes Stable isotope of Lithium but question is how ?
The most common plutonium isotope is plutonium 239.
E. A. Symons has written: 'Lithium isotope separation' -- subject(s): Isotopes, Isotope separation, Lithium
Lithium-7 is a stable isotope.
It is 94% of the time that lithium has 4 neutrons.
Lithium is element #3. That, of course, is the atomic number - the number of protons. The atomic mass will of course depend on the specific isotope. The most common isotope is Lithium-7, that is, atomic mass = 7. Lithium-6 also occurs in nature as a stable isotope.
nucleus... if it is still "lithium". Otherwise, it is 3 protons and some neutrons, depending on the isotope of lithium.
4 neutrons in 3Li7 isotope.