These isotopes are unstable and emit radiation.
Some isotopes are radioactive, some are not.
Some examples are deuterium and tritium which are radioactive isotopes of hydrogen.
Elements with no stable isotopes are called radioactive elements. These elements spontaneously undergo radioactive decay, which leads to the formation of stable isotopes over time.
Some examples are deuterium and tritium which are radioactive isotopes of hydrogen.
Not all of the transition elements are radioactive. Many of them are, and some of them have common radioactive isotopes, but some of them have no naturally occurring radioactive isotopes. Please note that all elements have synthetic radioactive isotopes, at least.
"Daughter isotopes" are called the decay products of an radioactive isotope.
Zirconium does have radioactive isotopes, but the main ones used in industry are not radioactive.
Not all isotopes are radioactive; the radioactive isotopes are unstable and emit radiations.
yes, all elements have isotopes. some stable, some radioactive.
with devices called Radiacs
radioactive decay
No, Barium has both stable and radioactive isotopes. Out of its 25 known isotopes, only 6 of them are considered radioactive. The most stable isotope of Barium is Barium-138, which is not radioactive.