Some are, and some are not.
The most radioactive element in the transition metals group is technetium. It has no stable isotopes and is typically produced in nuclear reactors as a byproduct. Its most common radioactive isotope is technetium-99, which is used in various medical procedures such as imaging scans.
All or almost all elements have radioactive isotopes if artificial isotopes are included. Among the naturally occurring elements, uranium, polonium, radium, and thorium have naturally occurring radioactive isotopes on earth.
Transition metals. in fact, it is the Only radioactive transition metal!
Yes, synthetic elements and transition elements can produce isotopes. Synthetic elements, which are typically created in laboratories through nuclear reactions, often have unstable isotopes that decay over time. Transition elements, while many are stable, also have isotopes that can be either stable or radioactive, depending on the element and its nuclear configuration. The variety of isotopes in both categories can have applications in fields such as medicine, industry, and research.
This statement is incorrect. Inner transition elements are a subset of transition elements, and they refer specifically to the lanthanides and actinides series. There are more transition elements (d-block elements) than inner transition elements in the periodic table.
Not all of the transition elements are radioactive. Many of them are, and some of them have common radioactive isotopes, but some of them have no naturally occurring radioactive isotopes. Please note that all elements have synthetic radioactive isotopes, at least.
You think probable to artificial radioactive elements considered transition metals.
are radioactive and the actinides are not
Any of a series of chemically similar, radioactive elements with atomic numbers ranging from 89 (actinium) through 103 (lawrencium). they are outer transition elements All of these elements are radioactive, and two of the elements, uranium and plutonium, are used to generate nuclear energy
Uranium is a member of the actinoids family. These chemical elements are:- they are considered frequently transition metals- they are radioactive elements- some are artificial elements- they have variable valence
The most radioactive element in the transition metals group is technetium. It has no stable isotopes and is typically produced in nuclear reactors as a byproduct. Its most common radioactive isotope is technetium-99, which is used in various medical procedures such as imaging scans.
The actinoids (formerly actinides) are all unstable metallic elements. The period 7 elements with atomic numbers from 89 (actinium, for which the group is named) through 103 comprise these elements. A link can be found below.
All or almost all elements have radioactive isotopes if artificial isotopes are included. Among the naturally occurring elements, uranium, polonium, radium, and thorium have naturally occurring radioactive isotopes on earth.
Transition metals. in fact, it is the Only radioactive transition metal!
There transition, which is the same thing as magnetic
Yes, synthetic elements and transition elements can produce isotopes. Synthetic elements, which are typically created in laboratories through nuclear reactions, often have unstable isotopes that decay over time. Transition elements, while many are stable, also have isotopes that can be either stable or radioactive, depending on the element and its nuclear configuration. The variety of isotopes in both categories can have applications in fields such as medicine, industry, and research.
This statement is incorrect. Inner transition elements are a subset of transition elements, and they refer specifically to the lanthanides and actinides series. There are more transition elements (d-block elements) than inner transition elements in the periodic table.