Below you will find example sentences with "stable isotopes". The examples show how this phrase is used in natural context and which words often surround it.
Stable Isotopes in a sentence
Corpus data
- Displayed example sentences: 20
- Discovered as a combination around: stable
- Corpus frequency in the collocation scan: 12
- Phrase length: 2 words
- Average sentence length: 22.7 words
Sentence profile
- Phrase position: 6 start, 10 middle, 4 end
- Sentence types: 20 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis
- The phrase "stable isotopes" has 2 words and usually appears in the middle in these examples. The average sentence has 22.7 words and is mostly made up of statements.
- Around this phrase, patterns and context words such as 3 1 stable isotopes per element, 3 2 stable isotopes per element, elements, element and nuclear stand out.
- In the phrase index, this combination connects with stable condition, less stable and less stable, linking the page to nearby combinations.
Example types with stable isotopes
This selection groups the examples by length and sentence type, making usage of the full phrase easier to scan:
Oxygen has three stable isotopes, and 14 unstable ones. (9 words)
All of the known stable isotopes occur naturally (see primordial isotope ). (11 words)
Of these stable isotopes, only 57 Fe has a nuclear spin (− 1 2 ). (13 words)
Some are unstable and short-lived, but there are approximately 300 known naturally occurring stable isotopes, including common elements like hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, that possess different numbers of neutrons based on how they formed. (36 words)
Feeding relations require extensive investigations into the gut contents of organisms, which can be difficult to decipher, or stable isotopes can be used to trace the flow of nutrient diets and energy through a food web. (36 words)
An effect of the instability of an odd number of either type of nucleons is that odd-numbered elements, such as the alkali metals, tend to have fewer stable isotopes than even-numbered elements. (34 words)
Example sentences (20)
The mean number of stable isotopes for the 80 stable elements is 3.1 stable isotopes per element.
As a rule, there is only a handful of stable isotopes for each of these elements, the average being 3.2 stable isotopes per element.
Elements with no stable isotopes have the atomic masses of their most stable isotopes, where such masses are shown, listed in parentheses.
Selenium has six observationally stable or nearly stable isotopes, 26 radioactive isotopes, and 9 isomers.
Tin is the 49th most abundant element and has, with 10 stable isotopes, the largest number of stable isotopes in the periodic table, thanks to its magic number of protons.
Nuclear decay main Eighty elements have at least one stable isotope which is never observed to decay, amounting to a total of about 254 stable isotopes.
Tellurium has eight stable or nearly stable isotopes, 31 unstable ones, and 17 isomers.
Some are unstable and short-lived, but there are approximately 300 known naturally occurring stable isotopes, including common elements like hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, that possess different numbers of neutrons based on how they formed.
Stable isotopes act like fingerprints or fibers in forensics, capturing details of where someone or something lived, what it ate or breathed, and how its environment changed over time.
It turns Fordow into a "nuclear, physics and technology centre" where centrifuges are used for purposes other than enrichment, like producing stable isotopes.
All of the known stable isotopes occur naturally (see primordial isotope ).
An effect of the instability of an odd number of either type of nucleons is that odd-numbered elements, such as the alkali metals, tend to have fewer stable isotopes than even-numbered elements.
Feeding relations require extensive investigations into the gut contents of organisms, which can be difficult to decipher, or stable isotopes can be used to trace the flow of nutrient diets and energy through a food web.
For instance, uranium and thorium have no stable isotopes but occur naturally in Earth's crust and atmosphere.
However it is not isotopically pure since ordinary copper consists of two stable isotopes, 69% 63 Cu and 31% 65 Cu, with different numbers of neutrons.
Kirby et al., p. 3 Together with the artificial 225 Ra (15 d), these are the five most stable isotopes of radium.
Of these stable isotopes, only 57 Fe has a nuclear spin (− 1 2 ).
Of the stable isotopes, barium-138 composes 71.7% of all barium, and the lighter the isotope, the less abundant.
Oxygen has three stable isotopes, and 14 unstable ones.
Silicon occurs in three stable isotopes ( 28 Si, 29 Si, 30 Si), and the natural variation in their proportions is greater than other uncertainties in the measurements.