Chemical property
They don't - which is why radioactive dating works.
Any influence was detected.
What is the question exactly? If it is about Uranium having physical and/or chemical properties, the answer is that it has both. Every single element and compound in this universe has both physical and chemical properties.
The decay of radium to lead is a nuclear change, not a chemical or physical change. It involves the transformation of radium atoms into lead atoms through the process of radioactive decay. This change is due to the emission of alpha particles and does not involve any chemical reactions or changes in the physical state of the substances.
No, radioactive decay isn't affected by anything - temperature or pressure because it isn't a chemical or physical reaction.
The radioactive chemical in the virtual lab is iodine-131.
Californium is an artificial radioactive chemical element.
No. It is a nuclear reaction - radioactive disintegration.
Mendelevium is an artificial chemical element, radioactive, unstable.
the soil can get radioactive poisining. The plants can then use that soil and absorb the radioactive chemical. It the is in our food and that is that
A physical change
Half life of an element can't be changed.. It is a characteristic of a radioactive element which is independent of chemical and physical conditions.. Half life is that time in which half of radioactive sample( i.e., a radioactive element) decomposes. So no matter what amount you take half life of an element remains same.