That's called a daughter isotope, or a daughter product. (The original isotope that decayed is the parent isotope.)
The stable isotope produced by radioactive decay is called a daughter isotope.
Radiogenic isotopes are formed through the radioactive decay of parent isotopes, while stable isotopes do not undergo radioactive decay. Radiogenic isotopes are used in geochronology to date rocks and minerals, while stable isotopes are used in various fields such as climate science and nutrition studies.
Radiometric dating, including radiocarbon dating, uses the natural decay process of unstable isotopes to determine the age of rocks, fossils, and other geological materials. By measuring the remaining amount of a radioactive isotope and its stable daughter product, scientists can calculate how long it has been since the material formed. This method is based on the principle that the rate of decay of a radioactive isotope is constant over time.
An isotope is considered stable if it does not undergo radioactive decay over time. This means that the nucleus of the isotope is not prone to breaking down and releasing radiation. Stable isotopes have a balance of protons and neutrons that make them resistant to spontaneous changes.
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.
it must eject the extra nucleons and should be conveted into a stable isotope.
Radioactive elements break down in to stable isotopes through nuclear decay. The list of isotopes from a nuclear isotope to a stable isotope is called its decay chain.
The stable isotope produced by radioactive decay is called a daughter isotope.
The radioactive isotope is disintegrated in time and emit radiations.
The radioactive isotope is disintegrated in time and emit radiations.
daughter isotope
Not necessarily. The fusion reactions in the sun produce primarily helium-4 which is stable.
The parent isotope is the original radioactive isotope that undergoes decay to form the daughter isotope. The daughter isotope is the stable isotope that is formed as a result of the radioactive decay of the parent isotope.
When an isotope is stable, it does not undergo radioactive decay. Stable isotopes have a balanced number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus, which prevents them from spontaneously changing into another element over time.
The process where an unstable parent isotope becomes a stable daughter isotope is called radioactive decay. During this process, the parent isotope undergoes a series of transformations, such as alpha or beta decay, emitting particles or energy until it reaches a stable state as a daughter isotope.
Radiogenic isotopes are formed through the radioactive decay of parent isotopes, while stable isotopes do not undergo radioactive decay. Radiogenic isotopes are used in geochronology to date rocks and minerals, while stable isotopes are used in various fields such as climate science and nutrition studies.
No, it has only one stable isotope.