This statement is correct. All radioisotopes decay at separate rates. They are unique and are not altered by chemical compounds.
there is no mode if no two answers are the same.
- radiodiagnostic- treatment with radioisotopes
(10,10,30,30,30,50,50) (20,20,30,30,30,40,40) These two sets have the same mean, median and mode.
If there is no repeated numbers there is simply no mode. If there is two numbers that are the same, (example: 3,3) then that will be your mode. (Data: 3,3 Mode:3)
Only if the two peaks are exactly the same.
There is no mode of this set because no two elements have the same value.
They could all be the same number, e.g. 55555 (mean=median=mode=5) or they could be three numbers the same, with an equal space between the first two and the last two, e.g. 24446 (mean=median=mode=4). For the mode to be well-defined, some of the numbers have to be the same.
Yes you can.2 same numbers
It is possible for two sets of data - not ALL of which are the same - to have the same measures of central tendency. However, if the two sets do have a mode, then that number must appear in both sets ... several times.
The mode has two or more bars on the graph with the same height.
The two types of radioactive decay are alpha and beta. Generally, in alpha decay the nucleus will lose 2 protons and 2 neutrons (it's a helium nucleus). Beta decay involves a neutron losing an electron and becoming a proton, so the atomic mass remains the same, but the atomic number increases by one since there is another proton.