All quarks decay at some point, and one good example of this is tritium (T), or Hydrogen-3 (H³), decaying into Helium-3 (He³).
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Comments
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i like you nuclear 1449
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L evon
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He somehow got small digits in the description (look at this save in the browser)
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cold "fusion?"
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@EvonNoryoziki or Evon for shorter totally watched youtube and did not learn first so thats why and also he had large bio letter idk why he just want to flex somebody Date:12/14/22 6:37PM Philippines time or GMT+8
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after 10 half decays things called nearly fully decayed
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@EvonNoryoziki Yes, He+ is not stable (chemically), but it can get e- from other places. Such as an electron from another decayed H-3.
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@EvonNoryoziki you've forgot about a neutron
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Stability of nuclei does not depend on the amount of electrons orbiting them
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Thanks. But... how is the helium supposed to last? 1 electron and 2 protons are hardly stable.