No, deuterium is stable. It is Tritium that is radioactive.
deuterium and tritium combined to fuel the sun
Deuterium is an example of natural, non-radioactive isotope; deuterium is the isotope of hydrogen with 1 proton and 1 neutron.
No. Not hydrogen itself. However there are a total of three isotopes of hydrogen - Hydrogen, Deuterium, and Tritium. Tritium is radioactive
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Regular hydrogen.
Deuterium is hydrogen. The difference between deuterium and protium (the regular hydrogen) is that deuterium has an extra neutron. As a result, there are some differences in physical properties such as density, boiling point, etc.
No, deuterium is not radioactive.
Deuterium is an example of natural, non-radioactive isotope; deuterium is the isotope of hydrogen with 1 proton and 1 neutron.
Some examples are deuterium and tritium which are radioactive isotopes of hydrogen.
Some examples are deuterium and tritium which are radioactive isotopes of hydrogen.
H3, Deuterium is radioactive. Uranium and plutonium are radioactive and are used in atomic bombs.
The hydrogen bomb basically it is the deuterium bomb which is a radioactive isotope of hydrogen.
Normal hydrogen is stable.Hydrogen-2 (deuterium) is also stable, but only about one hydrogen atom in a million is deuterium. Hydrogen-3 (tritium) is radioactive, and exceedingly rare. There are trace amounts of tritium on Earth (far, far less than deuterium) due to the interaction of cosmic rays with the atmosphere, particularly with nitrogen.
In my understanding, this is because a fusion reactor reacts deuterium to produce helium, which is not radioactive, whereas a fission uses uranium or plutonium, for example, which may react to form various radioactive isotopes. A fusion reactor may contain small quantities of tritium, in which case a radioactive isotope of hydrogen may be produced, but given that the majority of reactions occurring involve solely the deuterium, there is less radioactive waste produced.
No. Not hydrogen itself. However there are a total of three isotopes of hydrogen - Hydrogen, Deuterium, and Tritium. Tritium is radioactive
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Water is not an element, it is a compound and contains hydrogen and oxygen which are elements. Water has scientific names: dihydrogen oxide, deuterium oxide (horsey water) and ditritium oxide (radioactive water)
Every stable isotope is non radioactive. That is the definition of "stable." It is possible protons have a half life, but if so it exceeds 6.6 decillion years. Hydrogen and deuterium are stable. Tritium (H3) has a half life of about 12 years.