yep, sure are
Nuclear fusion and nuclear fission are processes that involve nuclear reactions but are not examples of radioactive decay. Chemical reactions, such as burning wood, do not involve nuclear processes and are also not examples of radioactive decay.
The rate of nuclear decay increases as the temperature of a radioactive sample increases. This is due to the increased kinetic energy of the nuclei at higher temperatures, which facilitates interactions that lead to nuclear decay.
yes
radioactive decay
- radioactive decay - nuclear fission - nuclear reactions
The instability of the nuclei is the basic cause of radioactive decay.
No. It is a nuclear reaction - radioactive disintegration.
It is a nuclear process.
weak force
If it is related to Nuclear studies, then the answer would be fusion.
Radioactive reaction is a red-ox reaction. This is a nuclear decay.
Nuclear reactions, radioactive decay, natural fission