Hydrogen has three isotopes
Hydrogen-1 and hydrogen-2 isotopes are radioactively stable.
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.
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.
In a neutral hydrogen atom, there is one electron, regardless of the isotope.
Chlorine has a lot of different isotopes but the 2 stable ones are chlorine 35 and chlorine 37
3
Hydrogen has 1 unstable isotope, and 2 stable isotopes.
Hydrogen-1 and hydrogen-2 isotopes are radioactively stable.
Hydrogen-1 and hydrogen-2 isotopes are radioactively stable.
hydrogen
The lightest element on the periodic table with no stable isotopes is hydrogen. It only has one proton in its nucleus and no stable isotopes.
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.
The isotopes protium (H-1) and deuterium (H-2) are stable; tritium (H-3) and artificial isotopes are unstable.
copper has 2 stable isotopes
No, there are many stable isotopes.
It has 10
Dubnium is an artificial chemical element and hasn't stable isotopes.