Radium is dangerous to feel but i'm assuming it feels smooth like a pebble
The naturally occurring isotope of radium we encounter is radium-226. It appears in the decay chain of uranium. When radium-226 undergoes alpha decay, radon-222 is the result. The equation looks like this: 88226Ra => 24He + 86222Rn The 24He is the alpha particle, which is a helium nucleus.
Your question is meaningless. Radium IS a radioactive element, and its power depends on the context. If you mean "is there an element more radioactive than radium" then yes, there are many, e.g. astatine.
radium heals woons so you can still listen to tunes radium heals wounds so you can still play tunes
approx. 31 g.
They feel like something is stuck through your ear ;)
radium has NO odor
At room temperature radium is a solid metal.
Oxygen (air) turns Radium black. Radium-Bromide makes air glow green like neon.
The radium nitride (Ra3N2) has a black color.
Radium oxide has never been characterised. As radium is group 2 metal with chemistry like barium, radium oxide is expected to be ionic.
its a redish silvery colour
Radium glows in the dark and is radioactive. When it decays into Radon gas, it emits alpha particles. It is fairly close to its compound radiumchlorite because like radium, it also decays emiting alpha particles. However, radiumchlorite is used to help cure canser. Overal, radium is like its most comon compound but can also have properties not related to its compounds at all.
radium
Radium is a chemical element, not a compound.
Radium is not a common commercial product.
Radium chloride, RaCl2, was the first radium compound to be prepared in a pure state and was the basis of Marie Curie's original separation of radium from barium. The first preparation of radium metal was by the electrolysis of a solution of radium chloride using a mercury cathode.
The first name was radium; some isotopes had in the past other names.