ChatterBank4 mins ago
isotopes
Thank you for clarifying the doubts . I know chemical elements have naturally occurring isotopes. Is there any element (atomic number 1 to 92) that exists in nature but does not have any isotope ? (i.e. only one form?) can you give the name? If all elements (naturally occurring ones) possess isotopes, are all these elements having radio-active isotopes? Are there any elements having isotopes but none of these isotopes is radio-active? (name please.)
Thanking you.
Thanking you.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes, "naturally occuring" and "radioactive" may not mean what you want them to mean. A highly unstable isotope of Helium may be produced on Earth by the decay of a naturally occuring radioactive element. Does that mean the Helium isotope is naturally occuring? And, as Clanad says, an isotope with a very long half life (say 1 miilion years) is radioactive.
Surely radioactivity is a natural phenomenon? There are two isotopes of helium, neither of which are radioactive.
An isotope is radioactive if its nucleus is "unstable". A highly unstable nucleus, such as Polonium-210, which was used to murder Alexander Litvinenko, has a very high Decay Constant and, consequently, a very short Half Life (a few weeks)
A slightly radioactive active isotope, such as Uranium-238, has a very low Decay Constant and a very long Half Life (over 4000 million years).
What is the Half Life of an isotope such as Carbon-12? It seems stable and has never been observed to decay. Does it have zero Decay Constant and therefore an infinite Half Life?
An isotope is radioactive if its nucleus is "unstable". A highly unstable nucleus, such as Polonium-210, which was used to murder Alexander Litvinenko, has a very high Decay Constant and, consequently, a very short Half Life (a few weeks)
A slightly radioactive active isotope, such as Uranium-238, has a very low Decay Constant and a very long Half Life (over 4000 million years).
What is the Half Life of an isotope such as Carbon-12? It seems stable and has never been observed to decay. Does it have zero Decay Constant and therefore an infinite Half Life?