Depending on the level you are looking at:
or
Low energy beta particles, say, from tritium, are called soft beta particles.
This is a chemical element. You can find the how many electron in a single atom by using a periodic table.
Hydrogen, Deuterium, Tritium
Tritium decays by beta decay (emits high energy electron converting one neutron to a proton) resulting in Helium-3.
Tritium and deuterium are isotopes of hydrogen with different numbers of neutrons. Tritium is radioactive and emits low-energy beta particles, while deuterium is stable. Tritium is used in self-luminous devices like exit signs, while deuterium is used in nuclear reactors for fuel and as a tracer in chemical reactions.
Tritium. What did you think it was?
The electrostatic repulsion force between deuterium and tritium can be calculated using Coulomb's Law, which states that the force between two charged particles is directly proportional to the product of their charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. Since deuterium and tritium are both positively charged particles, they would repel each other. The force would depend on the charges of the particles and the distance between them.
Hydrogen atom have three isotope which is hydrogen , deuterium , and tritium.
Hydrogen is not naturally radioactive. It is the simplest and most abundant element in the universe, made up of one proton and one electron. However, under certain conditions, hydrogen can be made radioactive through artificial processes, such as bombarding it with high-energy particles in a laboratory setting.
Yes. There are three isotopes in the Hydrogen family; Hydrogen (no neutrons); Deuterium (one neutron) & Tritium (two neutrons). Tritium is radioactive. It emits beta radiation (electron).
To find the mass defect, subtract the atomic mass of tritium (3.016049) from the sum of the masses of the individual particles (3 protons and 2 neutrons). To find the binding energy, use Einstein's equation E=mc^2, where m is the mass defect calculated earlier.
An element that does not contain all three subatomic particles—protons, neutrons, and electrons—is hydrogen-1 (the most common isotope of hydrogen). It has one proton and one electron but lacks neutrons. Other hydrogen isotopes, such as deuterium and tritium, have neutrons, but the standard hydrogen atom does not.