Water is not softened with deuterium.
When the Earth first formed, there was an abundant amount of deuterium in the atmosphere. Today, most of the deuterium has fused into helium and because of that, there is little deuterium left.
Hydrogen-2 is commonly referred to as deuterium, in addition to that it is known as Deuterium-1
No. Deuterium is not an element in and of itself. It is an isotope of hydrogen.
The nucleus of Deuterium contains ...1 Proton and 1 Neutron
Deuterium is an isotope of hydrogen.
No, deuterium is stable. It is Tritium that is radioactive.
deuterium
large tubercles and/or increased deposit of bony matrix occur at sites of osteoclasts
The most likely fusion reaction to be exploited is deuterium + tritium forming helium +a neutron, not what you have put in your question. The physics of this was worked out by Hans Bethe
Deuterium was discovered by Harold Urey in 1931.
Deuterium was discovered in 1931 by Harold Urey.
Deuterium flouride is an acid
Water is not softened with deuterium.
When the Earth first formed, there was an abundant amount of deuterium in the atmosphere. Today, most of the deuterium has fused into helium and because of that, there is little deuterium left.
large deposit of valuable ore
Sure.