Product of radioactive decay 42He is an alpha particle
The product.
An alpha particle
A beta particle
Yes. Alpha particles can be a product of radioactive decay, and alpha particles are simply Helium nuclei. Unless they interact with other atoms, they will tend to pick up stray electrons (they need two) and become stable 4He atoms.
The radioactive decay of americium 241 is by alpha disintegration; the disintegration of radioactive krypton isotopes is by beta particles emission.
A gamma wave...
The product.
An alpha particle
An alpha particle
Alpha particle.
A beta particle
True. The offspring nuclide is the resulting nucleus that is produced as part of the radioactive decay process.
radioactive decay
The decay product ratio is the ratio of the amount of a specific decay product to the amount of the parent isotope in a radioactive decay chain. It is used to determine the relative contribution of different decay pathways in the decay of a radioactive substance.
The term for the element that a radioactive isotope decays into is called the "daughter product". During radioactive decay, the original isotope transforms into a different element or isotope through a series of decay reactions.
The stable isotope produced by radioactive decay is called a daughter isotope.
The final product is not radioactive.