There is no such isotope (75) known. Iodine (atom number 53, average Atomic Mass 127) has 53 protons and 70 up till 82 neutrons. The lowest known isotope number therefor is 123.
An isotope of iodine with 74 neutrons would have a mass number of 53 +74 = 127. Therefore its symbol would be I -127 or 127 C 53. 127 and 53 should be written as superscript and subscript respectively before writing the chemical symbol of iodine when using the later (127 C 53).Ê 53 is the atomic number of iodine.ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ
No, iodine-127 is not radioactive. It is a stable isotope of iodine, which means it does not undergo radioactive decay and does not emit harmful radiation.
The answer is simple it is 8 days for iodine-131 but it depends on what isotope you are talking about
If it is an atom (neutral) with 53 electrons then it can be deduced that it has [(53 electrons) + (charge=0)] = 53 protons and (75 neutrons), hence its atom number is 53 (= number of protons) being the element Iodine with mass number 128 [(p+n) = (53+75) = 128], its most unstabel radio-isotope ( I(128) half-time 25.0 min, beta-minus + gamma radiant).However the stable Tellurium-128 (atom number = proton number = 52, mass number 128) has 52 protons, so the -1 charged ION (Te- ) of it has also 53 electrons, though it is not very stable.Te- is called per-telluride ion, compare with the per-oxide ion O-.
Iodine has 53 protons. Iodine 127 has 74 neutrons. With a negative charge, it would have an extra electron, meaning it would have 54 electrons.
Iodine-131 is a radioactive isotope of the element iodine.
Iodine-131 (not iodone) is a radioactive isotope of iodine: this isotope has important applications in the treatment of thyroid diseases.
This is stable isotope of iodine - iodine-127.
An isotope of iodine with 74 neutrons would have a mass number of 53 +74 = 127. Therefore its symbol would be I -127 or 127 C 53. 127 and 53 should be written as superscript and subscript respectively before writing the chemical symbol of iodine when using the later (127 C 53).Ê 53 is the atomic number of iodine.ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ
If you use a heavier isotope of iodine, it should be radioactive.
Iodine is an element. It comes in only one form I-127 so there are no isotopes.
No, iodine-127 is not radioactive. It is a stable isotope of iodine, which means it does not undergo radioactive decay and does not emit harmful radiation.
iodine, isotope, ionic, iridium, ionize.
This is the iodine isotope 131I.
The isotope iodine-122 has 53 protons and electrons and 69 neutrons.
Iodine typically has an atomic number of 53, which means it has 53 protons. The most common isotope of iodine, iodine-127, has 74 neutrons. To find the number of neutrons in an isotope, you subtract the atomic number from the mass number; for iodine-127, that calculation is 127 (mass number) - 53 (atomic number) = 74 neutrons.
A typical atom of iodine contains 74 neutrons.