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A hydrogen bomb is actually a fission-fusion-fission reaction. The primary fission trigger (plutonium) supplies the energy to induce fusion, but then the fusion energy is used to initiate the secondary fission, which is a large amount of uranium. (in a "clean" H bomb, the uranium is replaced with lead, making it much weaker) also, the radiation will affect the surrounding area, creating a large number of isotopes, dramatically increasing the radioactive fallout.-Akilae

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What are Radioactive isotopes used for?

Some examples are deuterium and tritium which are radioactive isotopes of hydrogen.


What are some examples of radioactive isotopes?

Some examples are deuterium and tritium which are radioactive isotopes of hydrogen.


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Usually not, but all elements have radioactive isotopes.


What hydrogen isotopes are stable?

Hydrogen-1 and hydrogen-2 isotopes are radioactively stable.


Can you make hydrogen a radioactive element?

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Technetium (Tc) is the element that has no stable isotopes. All of its isotopes are radioactive with half-lives ranging from minutes to millions of years.


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