No, most isotopes are not stable. Many isotopes are radioactive and decay over time, releasing radiation in the process. Only a few isotopes are stable and do not undergo radioactive decay.
Yes, carbon (atomic number 6) is a stable element with both stable and unstable isotopes. The most common stable isotope of carbon is carbon-12, which makes up about 98.9% of naturally occurring carbon.
Hydrogen has three stable isotopes: protium (1H), deuterium (2H), and tritium (3H). Among these, protium is the most abundant, making up over 99.98% of naturally occurring hydrogen.
The most common stable isotopes of nitrogen are nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15. Nitrogen-14 is the most abundant, making up about 99.6% of naturally occurring nitrogen, while nitrogen-15 makes up the remaining 0.4%.
Technetium (Tc) is the element that has no stable isotopes. All of its isotopes are radioactive with half-lives ranging from minutes to millions of years.
Lithium has two stable isotopes, lithium-6 and lithium-7. There are also several radioactive isotopes of lithium, with lithium-8 being the most common radioactive isotope.
It has 10
Tin or Stannum with 10 stable isotopes
The most stable isotopes of nitrogen are 14N and 15N.
Rhenium has 7 isotopes. The most stable and abundant isotopes are rhenium-185 and rhenium-187.
Radioactive isotopes are not stable.
Stable isotopes are used as tracers.
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.
If you mean oxygen: like most elements, it has both stable isotopes, and unstable (i.e., radioactive) isotopes. 16O, 17O and 18O are stable; the unstable (radioactive) isotopes include 15O and 14O.
copper has 2 stable isotopes
Hydrogen-1 and hydrogen-2 isotopes are radioactively stable.
Yes, carbon (atomic number 6) is a stable element with both stable and unstable isotopes. The most common stable isotope of carbon is carbon-12, which makes up about 98.9% of naturally occurring carbon.
Thorium, radium, radon, polonium, thallium, etc.