No isotope of silver ordinarily found in nature is radioactive. Like all elements, silver has synthetic radioactive isotopes.
Silver is not radio active, none of silver's isotopes have radio activity.
ur welcome!
There are two radioactive alkaline earth metals: radium (Ra) and radium (Ra). Both elements have radioactive isotopes that undergo radioactive decay.
Nearly 100% of aluminum found in nature is 27Al, which is not radioactive. There are traces found of radioactive 26Al, but they are not significant. Other, synthetic, radioactive isotopes of aluminum exist, such as 25Al.
When T2 phages are grown in the presence of radioactive phosphorus, the phage DNA will incorporate the radioactive phosphorus into its structure during replication. This allows for visualizing the localization of the phage DNA within the infected bacterial cell using autoradiography.
Tritium is the only radioactive form of hydrogen. It is a hydrogen isotope with two neutrons in its nucleus, making it unstable and radioactive.
Some synthetic elements are naturally radioactive due to their unstable atomic structures. For example, elements beyond uranium on the periodic table are typically artificially produced and tend to be radioactive. These elements can emit radiation as they undergo radioactive decay.
No, radioactive gold cannot rust. Rusting is a chemical reaction that occurs with iron and other metals when exposed to oxygen and moisture, but gold does not undergo rusting. Radioactive decay in gold may lead to changes in its properties and composition, but it does not rust like iron.
no it is not radioactive
natural isotope of gold is 197 and he is stable element and not with radioactive decay why the gold ingot are often associated with age?
no because i love you!
2
To some extent most elements are radioactive whenever there is a possibility of an unstable isotope. However, generally speaking, gold is not considered to be radioactive. Having said that, radioactive gold can be made.
Sure it will. "Radioactive" means just that - that the corresponding isotope will decay.
Both are extremely radioactive isotopes. Gold 186 has 2 more neutrons.
all but one.
No, gold has only one naturally occurring isotope and it is non-radioactive.
You might get gold but these obtained isotopes are radioactive and unstable; so it is useless.
Nope. Gold is none of those, and is otherwise inert, too. That is why gold is often used for people's tooth crowns, and as electrical contacts in electronics. Gold does not even corrode or "Rust".