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  1. Valley of stability - Wikipedia

    • In nuclear physics, the valley of stability (also called the belt of stability, nuclear valley, energy valley, or beta stability valley) is a characterization of the stability of nuclides to radioactivity based on their binding energy. Nuclides are composed of protons and neutrons. The shape of the valley refers to the profile of binding energy as a function of the numbers of neutrons … See more

    Description

    All atomic nuclei are composed of protons and neutrons bound together by the nuclear force. There are 286 primordial nuclides that occur naturally on earth, each corresponding to a unique number of protons, cal… See more

    The role of neutrons

    The protons and neutrons that comprise an atomic nucleus behave almost identically within the nucleus. The approximate symmetry of isospin treats these particles as identical, but in a different quantum state. This symm… See more

     
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  2. Isotopes shown in red, yellow, green, and blue are progressively less stable and more radioactive; the farther an isotope is from the diagonal band of stable isotopes, the shorter its half-life.
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  3. 20.1: Nuclear Stability and Radioactive Decay

    In nuclear decay reactions (or radioactive decay), the parent nucleus is converted to a more stable daughter nucleus. Nuclei with too many neutrons decay by …

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    • 20.4: The Valley of Stability- Predicting the Type of …

      Aug 14, 2020 · Any nucleus that is unstable and decays spontaneously is said to be radioactive, emitting subatomic particles and electromagnetic radiation. The emissions are collectively called radioactivity and can be measured.

    • 2.5 The Belt of Stability - Predicting the Type of …

      Any nucleus that is unstable and decays spontaneously is said to be radioactive, emitting subatomic particles and electromagnetic radiation. The emissions are collectively called radioactivity and can be measured.

    • Electricity - detailed contents

      Stability: the N-Z curve. The N-Z curve is a plot of the number of neutrons (N) against the number of protons (Z). lines: i) the 'stability' line - a gentle curve starting from the origin and of increasing gradient. ii) the line of N = Z - a …

    • Radioactive decays at limits of nuclear stability

    • 3.5: Stability of Nuclei - Physics LibreTexts

      The profile of binding energy across the valley of stability is roughly a parabola (e.g., Iron-56 is stable, while Vandium-56 is unstable to \(β^−\) decay. It is known that a free neutron is not a stable particle, it actually decays by emission of an …

    • Lecture 9.3: Stability (10:22) - MIT OpenCourseWare

      Lecture 9.3: Stability (10:22) Description: The discussion of nuclear binding energy leads to a set of nuclides that are stable and others that can decay. (10:22)

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    • 21.2: Patterns of Nuclear Stability - Chemistry LibreTexts