Isotopes of tin

id: isotopes-of-tin-181-1835979
title: Isotopes of tin
text: Tin (50Sn) is the element with the greatest number of stable isotopes. This is probably related to the fact that 50 is a "magic number" of protons. In addition, twenty-nine unstable tin isotopes are known, including tin-100 (ⁱ⁰⁰Sn) and tin-132 (ⁱ⁳⁲Sn), which are both "doubly magic". The longest-lived tin radioisotope is tin-126 (ⁱ⁲⁶Sn), with a half-life of 230,000 years. The other 28 radioisotopes have half-lives of less than a year.
brand slug: wiki
category slug: encyclopedia
description: Nuclides with atomic number of 50 but with different mass numbers
original url: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotopes_of_tin
date created: 2005-08-24T10:38:55Z
date modified: 2024-09-05T17:38:45Z
main entity: {"identifier":"Q687521","url":"https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q687521"}
image:
fields total: 13
integrity: 15

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