Stability curve is shown and description of location of
nuclides which will decay by each decay method.
Not exact matches
These include the Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) being built in Darmstadt, Germany,
which uses heavy
nuclides such as uranium for the initial collisions with light nuclei.
To ascertain the age of the boulders strewn by the glaciers and thus come up with a date when glaciers were at their greatest extent, Willenbring and colleagues used a technique known as cosmogenic
nuclide exposure dating,
which measures the chemical residue of supernova explosions.
Uranium - 235 is the only fissile radioactive isotope
which is a primordial
nuclide existing in the nature in its present form since before the creation of Earth.