Yes, this new daughter is a different chemical element and will react differently chemically than the precursor element.
The stable isotope formed by the breakdown of a radioactive isotope is called a daughter isotope. This process is known as radioactive decay, where a radioactive isotope transforms into a stable daughter isotope through the emission of particles or energy.
The daughter product in the beta decay of 144Ce is 144Pr, which stands for promethium. Promethium is a radioactive element that forms as a result of the beta decay of cerium-144.
The final product is not radioactive.
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.
The daughter product of potassium-40 is argon-40, which is formed through the process of radioactive decay. Potassium-40 undergoes electron capture to become argon-40, releasing a neutrino and a positron in the process. Argon-40 is stable and does not undergo further decay.
The daughter product of nuclear decay is a new element or isotope that is formed as a result of the original radioactive material decaying.
A gamma wave...
3 half-lives
When a radioactive material undergoes radioactive decay, except spontaneous fission, a daughter product is formed. The daughter may or may not be radioactive. If it is, this daughter product begins its own evolution according to its decay scheme and its own half-life. Any daughter products from that decay event will either be stable or will decay according to how (un)stable the daughter is and what its half-life happens to be. The original radionuclide continues to decay in its own way. You can see a "dynamic" developing here. The fact that a radioactive material has a half-life doesn't speak to what happens to the material or to its daughter products. It is only a measure of the rate of decay of a material. Radioactive materials decay according to what they are, and their daughter products will, if they are not stable, undergo decay as well, each according to its own decay scheme. The half-life only puts a timeline on things. And it (the half-life idea) must be applied to each unstable daughter. A consequence of radioactive decay and inspection of the daughter products allows us to use radioactive decay schemes to date materials. There are a number of radionuclides that are useful in doing this, and the decay schemes are well known. We understand the decay rates of the original material and also its daughters, and by counting all of them, we can "rewind time" to the period when they were isolated and state with good accuracy when the material was sequestered. Different methods of dating materials might be applied, depending on the material and its age.
The stable isotope formed by the breakdown of a radioactive isotope is called a daughter isotope. This process is known as radioactive decay, where a radioactive isotope transforms into a stable daughter isotope through the emission of particles or energy.
A daughter product is one name given to this effect. The daughter product itself may undergo radioactive disintegration again.
Product of radioactive decay 42He is an alpha particle
according to google XD, this is the radioactive atom that decays to product a daughter isotope
A daughter product is either a different element altogether, or is a different nuclide of the same parent element. A daughter product may or may not be radioactive. radioactive decay is a nucleus consists of a bunch of protons and neutrons known as nucleons.
The daughter product in the beta decay of 144Ce is 144Pr, which stands for promethium. Promethium is a radioactive element that forms as a result of the beta decay of cerium-144.
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.
The final product is not radioactive.