Yes
Because radioactivity is a naturalphenomenonthat is independent on any external conditions of temperature,pressure,humidity, ... etc.
All radon isotopes are radioactive and unstable; the radioactivity is not dependent on temperature.
Pressure and radioactivity.
No, this statement is not true because Radioactivity or Radioactive decay is independent of temperature.
That depends on what it transduces: pressure, temperature, light, radioactivity, etc.
No, the enthalpy change (H) is not independent of temperature. It can vary with temperature changes.
Being very radioactive einsteinium is hot.
A series of light-dependent reactions that are temperature independent, and a series of temperature-dependent reactions that are light independent.
Gas at room temperature, radioactivity, low electron affinity, or low creativity?
For ideal gases, the partial pressure term in equilibrium constant expressions is independent of temperature. This means that the concentration term for ideal gases is independent of temperature, assuming the ideal gas law holds true.
At room temperature, francium is a solid metal. However, due to its extreme rarity and radioactivity, it is not typically found in large enough quantities to be observable at room temperature.
If you measure the temperature every hour, then time is the independent variable (value), and temperature is the dependent variable (value).