Hydrogen is considered stable in its most common form, which is a diatomic molecule (H2). However, hydrogen can be reactive and form compounds with other elements, making it potentially unstable in certain chemical reactions.
Helium is a stable element.
Stable nuclei have a balanced number of protons and neutrons, while unstable nuclei have an imbalance. Unstable nuclei undergo radioactive decay to become more stable.
In order to determine if equilibrium is stable or unstable, you can analyze the system's response to small disturbances. If the system returns to its original state after a disturbance, it is stable. If the system moves further away from equilibrium after a disturbance, it is unstable.
Stable nuclei have a balanced number of protons and neutrons, while unstable nuclei have an imbalance, leading to radioactive decay.
No, not all objects at equilibrium are stable. There are two types of equilibrium: stable equilibrium, where a system returns to its original state when disturbed, and unstable equilibrium, where a system moves away from its original state when disturbed. Objects at unstable equilibrium are not stable.
Hydrogen has 1 unstable isotope, and 2 stable isotopes.
Hydrogen peroxide is the least stable.
the antonym of stable is unstable
The isotopes protium (H-1) and deuterium (H-2) are stable; tritium (H-3) and artificial isotopes are unstable.
An isotope with too many neutrons can be unstable for example Hydrogen-3 is unstable while hydrogen-1 and 2 are stable. But so can one with too few neutrons, for example lead-204 is unstable while lead-206, 207, and 208 are stable.
is peru government stable or unstable
cuba is stable
stable
stable
No Hydrogen is highly unstable and reactive. This is because its valency is 1 e- i.e. it will gain an electron to fulfill its duplet(it is that state when the outermost orbit has 2 e-). Deuterium is an isotope of hydrogen which is again very unstable although its duplet is fulfilled the reason for this is not known to me.
Unstable.
Stable isotopes do not undergo nuclear decay. Hydrogen has three isotopes, two are stable and the third is unstable. They are ;_ protium; 1 proton , 0 neutrons and 1 electron (Stable) The commonest isotope of hydrogen. deuterium ; 1 proton , 1 neutron and 1 electron (stable). Also known as 'heavy hydrogen - used to make heavy water). tritium ; 1 proton , 2 neutrons, and 1 electron (unstable - undergoes radio-active decay).