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  • Radionuclide - Wikipedia
    A radionuclide (radioactive nuclide, radioisotope or radioactive isotope) is a nuclide that is unstable and known to undergo radioactive decay into a different nuclide, which may be another radionuclide (see decay chain) or be stable
  • Radionuclides | US EPA
    Every radionuclide emits radiation at its own specific rate, which is measured in terms of half-life Radioactive half-life is the time required for half of the radioactive atoms present to decay Radioactive decay is when a radioisotope transforms into another radioisotope; this process emits radiation in some form
  • What are radionuclides? Uses and dangers - Nuclear energy
    A radioactive nuclide or radionuclide is an unstable nuclide and therefore degenerates by emitting ionizing radiation
  • Radionuclide - Radioisotope | nuclear-power. com
    Some nuclides are unstable and radioactive These nuclides are known as radionuclides (radioactive nuclides) or radioisotopes (radioactive isotopes) These unstable isotopes decay through various radioactive decay pathways, most commonly alpha decay, beta decay, gamma decay, or electron capture
  • What is Radionuclide – Radioisotope – Definition - Radiation Dosimetry
    These nuclides are known as radionuclides (radioactive nuclides) or radioisotopes (radioactive isotopes) Radiation Dosimetry In nuclear physics and nuclear chemistry, the various species of atoms whose nuclei contain particular numbers of protons and neutrons are called nuclides
  • Radionuclides Rule Overview - U. S. Environmental Protection Agency
    Radionuclide Sources ¾Naturally occurring radionuclides zRegional (e g , Great Lakes, mountains) zGeological (granitic formations, sandstone aquifers, shales, phosphate deposits) ¾Man-made radionuclides zNuclear weapons power plants zHospitals medical facilities zIndustry (labs, pharmaceuticals)
  • Radioactive isotope | Description, Uses, Examples | Britannica
    A radioactive isotope, also known as a radioisotope, radionuclide, or radioactive nuclide, is any of several species of the same chemical element with different masses whose nuclei are unstable and dissipate excess energy by spontaneously emitting radiation in the form of alpha, beta, and gamma rays Every chemical element has one or more
  • Uranium) Radionuclides (including Radon, Radium and
    Radionuclides (including Radon, Radium and Uranium) Hazard Summary Uranium, radium, and radon are naturally occurring radionuclides found in the environment




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