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The list excludes non-strategic (tactical) nuclear weapons and the partial nuclear triad of France and Pakistan. The United States and Russia, previously Soviet Union, have been wielding their nuclear triads since the 1960s. India completed its nuclear triad in 2018 [1] and China in 2020. [2]
A nuclear triad is a three-pronged military force structure of land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), and strategic bombers with nuclear bombs and missiles. [1]
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).
A table or chart of nuclides is a two-dimensional graph of isotopes of the elements, in which one axis represents the number of neutrons (symbol N) and the other represents the number of protons (atomic number, symbol Z) in the atomic nucleus. Each point plotted on the graph thus represents a nuclide of a known or hypothetical chemical element.
Position-specific isotopes can be used to trace environmental pollutants through local and global environment. [22] This is specifically useful as heavy isotopes are often used to synthesize chemicals and then will get incorporated into the natural environment through biodegradation. Thus, tracing position-specific isotopes in the environment ...
This is a list of radioactive nuclides (sometimes also called isotopes), ordered by half-life from shortest to longest, in seconds, minutes, hours, days and years. Current methods make it difficult to measure half-lives between approximately 10 −19 and 10 −10 seconds.
Scientists have long searched for long-lived heavy isotopes outside of the valley of stability, [6] [7] [8] hypothesized by Glenn T. Seaborg in the late 1960s. [9] [10] These relatively stable nuclides are expected to have particular configurations of "magic" atomic and neutron numbers, and form a so-called island of stability.
Each island contains isotopes with a non-standard ordering of single particle levels in the nuclear shell model. Such an area was first described in 1975 by French physicists carrying out spectroscopic mass measurements of exotic isotopes of lithium and sodium. [1] Since then further studies have shown that at least five such regions exist.