enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Radithor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radithor

    A bottle of Radithor at the National Museum of Nuclear Science & History in New Mexico, United States. Radithor was a patent medicine that is a well-known example of radioactive quackery. It consisted of triple-distilled water containing at a minimum 1 microcurie (37 kBq) each of the radium-226 and 228 isotopes.

  3. Isotope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotope

    A nuclide is a species of an atom with a specific number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus, for example, carbon-13 with 6 protons and 7 neutrons. The nuclide concept (referring to individual nuclear species) emphasizes nuclear properties over chemical properties, whereas the isotope concept (grouping all atoms of each element) emphasizes chemical over nuclear.

  4. Crimes involving radioactive substances - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crimes_involving...

    Radithor, a well known patent medicine or snake oil, is possibly the best known example of radioactive quackery. It consisted of triple distilled water containing at a minimum 1 microcurie (37 kBq) each of the radium -226 and radium-228 isotopes.

  5. Radiochemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiochemistry

    Radiochemistry is the chemistry of radioactive materials, where radioactive isotopes of elements are used to study the properties and chemical reactions of non-radioactive isotopes (often within radiochemistry the absence of radioactivity leads to a substance being described as being inactive as the isotopes are stable).

  6. Radionuclide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radionuclide

    They have shorter half-lives than primordial radionuclides. They arise in the decay chain of the primordial isotopes thorium-232, uranium-238, and uranium-235. Examples include the natural isotopes of polonium and radium. Cosmogenic isotopes, such as carbon-14, are present because they are continually being formed in the atmosphere due to ...

  7. List of elements by stability of isotopes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_elements_by...

    Of the 26 "monoisotopic" elements that have only a single stable isotope, all but one have an odd atomic number—the single exception being beryllium. In addition, no odd-numbered element has more than two stable isotopes, while every even-numbered element with stable isotopes, except for helium, beryllium, and carbon, has at least three.

  8. List of nuclides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_nuclides

    This represents isotopes of the first 105 elements, except for elements 87 , 102 and 104 (rutherfordium). At least 3,300 nuclides have been experimentally characterized [1] (see List of radioactive nuclides by half-life for the nuclides with decay half-lives less than one hour).

  9. Isotopologue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotopologue

    An isotopologue with a doubly substituted bond is therefore slightly more thermodynamically stable, which will tend to produce a higher abundance of the doubly substituted (or “clumped”) species than predicted by the statistical abundance of each heavy isotope (known as a stochastic distribution of isotopes).