The final product is not radioactive.
no it is the inboard end of a rope chain on a boat ie. anchor chain
Amino acids combine much like links in a chain to form proteins.
fats have nonpolar hydrocarbon chain.
thier shape is essentially made up of a long chain alkyl group with ~cooh end chain.
The OH ends of the cellulose chain allow for hydrogen bonding with the water molecules. The electrons concentrate around the Carbon side - makes the OH end polar. A more positive end on the H side, and a more negative charge on the carbon side.
The final product is not radioactive.
It would end in a stable isotope.
It must obviously end with a stable isotope - for if you get an unstable isotope, that means that it will continue decaying, thus, the chain doesn't end yet.
Only the end product of the decay chain of uranium, a non radioactive isotope of lead.
Usually called a 'decay chain', there is a series of radioactive decays which end with a stable isotope. Ex: uranium undergoes about 14 steps in the decay chain that ends with the formation of a stable isotope of Lead.
Generally, a fatty acid consists of a straight chain of an even number of carbon atoms, with hydrogen atoms along the length of the chain and at one end of the chain and a carboxyl group (―COOH) at the other end. It is that carboxyl group that makes it an acid (carboxylic acid).
Radioactive
bcoz, they undergo uncontrolled chain reaction,
Husqvarna makes husquvarna chain saws
Ordinary phosphorus found in nature is not radioactive. Like all other elements, radioactive synthetic isotopes of phosphorus have been made.
Transuranium elements are radioactive and unstable; the stability of a nucleus is a problem of nucleon physics.
All the decay chain isotopes are radioactive and toxic (excepting the last member which is non-radioactive but also toxic); you think probably to radium or polonium.