It is rare and stable.
None of the isotopes of xenon ordinarily found in nature is radioactive. Like all elements, xenon has synthetic radioactive isotopes.
Plutonium is a radioactive chemical element; practically all plutonium is man made - in the nature plutonium is extremely rare.
Some isotopes of xenon do undergo radioactive decay to caesium.
xenon is stable compound.......
There are 40 unstable isotopes (an element contained in xenon) that undergo radioactive decay.
None of the isotopes of xenon ordinarily found in nature is radioactive. Like all elements, xenon has synthetic radioactive isotopes.
Plutonium is a radioactive chemical element; practically all plutonium is man made - in the nature plutonium is extremely rare.
Some isotopes of xenon do undergo radioactive decay to caesium.
xenon is stable compound.......
Radioactive isotopes are not stable.
Sodium chloride is a chemical compound not an isotope. But:- natural sodium contain the rare radioactive isotope 22Na and the stable isotope 23Na- natural chlorine contain the rare radioactive isotope 36Cl and the stable isotopes 35Cl and 37Cl
It is stable, although there are heavier isotopes that could be radioactive.
By definition. If it were stable, then it would not be radioactive.
There are 40 unstable isotopes (an element contained in xenon) that undergo radioactive decay.
Stable isotopes are chemical isotopes that are not radioactive, meaning that they do not spontaneously undergo radioactive decay.
Xenon, like all the noble gases except helium, already has a stable octet!
Yes. Helium, Xenon, and Neon have stable electron numbers (octette rule).