Rubidium has one stable isotope,85Rb. The isotope 87Rb which composes almost 28% of naturally occurring rubidium is slightly radioactive, with a half-life of 49 billion years-more than three times longer than the estimated age of the universe.
There are 26 isotopes of rubidium known with naturally occurring rubidium being composed of just two isotopes; Rb-85 (72.2%) and the radioactive Rb-87 (27.8%). Natural rubidium is radioactive with specific activity of about 670 Bq/g, enough to fog photographic film in approximately 30 to 60 days.
Rb-87 has a half-life of 4.88 × 1010 years.
Based on Wikipedia article on Rubidium.
Yes. Radium is a highly radioactive alkali earth metal, and inhalation, injection, ingestion or body exposure to radium can cause chemical burns, radiation burns and can lead to cancer and other disorders. Radium is chemically similar to calcium, and it has the ability to replace calcuim in bones, which is extremely harmful. A link is provided to the Wikipedia article on radium.
Yes, the reaction between fluorine and radium can be violent. Fluorine is a highly reactive element, and when it comes into contact with radium, which is a radioactive metal, it can lead to a rapid and potentially explosive reaction releasing large amounts of energy.
There are at least 50 different elements produced in a nuclear explosion, most are fission products in 2 peaks, some are formed by neutron capture and beta decay. The majority of these are radioactive isotopes of the elements.
"Illuminate your world with Radium!" "Shine bright like Radium!" "Glowing brilliance with Radium." "Radiant energy, powered by Radium."
The first name was radium; some isotopes had in the past other names.
Radium is strongly radioactive.
Yes. Radium is a highly radioactive alkali earth metal, and inhalation, injection, ingestion or body exposure to radium can cause chemical burns, radiation burns and can lead to cancer and other disorders. Radium is chemically similar to calcium, and it has the ability to replace calcuim in bones, which is extremely harmful. A link is provided to the Wikipedia article on radium.
Yes, the reaction between fluorine and radium can be violent. Fluorine is a highly reactive element, and when it comes into contact with radium, which is a radioactive metal, it can lead to a rapid and potentially explosive reaction releasing large amounts of energy.
There are at least 50 different elements produced in a nuclear explosion, most are fission products in 2 peaks, some are formed by neutron capture and beta decay. The majority of these are radioactive isotopes of the elements.
radium
"Illuminate your world with Radium!" "Shine bright like Radium!" "Glowing brilliance with Radium." "Radiant energy, powered by Radium."
The first name was radium; some isotopes had in the past other names.
No plural for radium.
Radium primarily forms compounds with oxygen, such as radium oxide (RaO), radium peroxide (RaO2), and radium hydroxide (Ra(OH)2). It can also form compounds with other elements, such as radium chloride (RaCl2) and radium sulfate (RaSO4). These compounds are generally highly radioactive due to the nature of radium as a radioactive element.
Port radium
radium has NO odor
radium was not invented, it was discovered.