Assuming you mean "titanium", and assuming you mean the equation for the nuclear decay: there are many different of those, since titanium (like just about many elements) has many different isotopes.
The nuclear decay equation for Po-208 is: Po-208 → Pb-204 + He-4
A nuclear equation is balanced when the sum of atomic numbers and mass numbers on each side of the equation is the same.
Neutrons are the important particles of nuclear chain reactions
N14
The nuclear reactions are:Pu-239(2n, gamma)Pu-241(beta)Am-241
What is the equation that calculates in nuclear reaction?
The nuclear decay equation for Po-208 is: Po-208 → Pb-204 + He-4
All nuclear decay is spontaneous.
A nuclear equation is balanced when the sum of atomic numbers and mass numbers on each side of the equation is the same.
Energy and electrical charge are two quantities that are always conserved in nuclear decay equation.
Neutrons are the important particles of nuclear chain reactions
Gamma rays do not have mass or charge, so they do not contribute to the balance of a nuclear equation that involves the emission of an alpha particle. The alpha particle carries away the mass and charge necessary to balance the nuclear equation.
In a balanced nuclear equation, the sum of the mass numbers on the right must equal the sum on the left
The question cannot be answered since there is no equation there!
The balanced nuclear equation for the beta decay of potassium-42 is: ^42K -> ^42Ca + e^- + νe
The nuclear equation for the beta decay of Sn-126 is: Sn-126 -> Sb-126 + e- + anti-neutrino
nuclear power