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nuclide
[ noo-klahyd, nyoo- ]
noun
- an atomic species in which the atoms all have the same atomic number and mass number.
- an individual atom in such a species.
nuclide
/ ˈnjuːklaɪd /
noun
- a species of atom characterized by its atomic number and its mass number See also isotope
nuclide
/ no̅o̅′klīd′ /
- An atomic nucleus identified by its atomic element and its mass number. For example, a carbon-14 nuclide is the nucleus of a carbon atom, which has six protons, with mass number 14 (thus having eight neutrons).
- See also isotope
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of nuclide1
Example Sentences
Critics questioned that age estimate, and scientists revised the date to at least 900,000 years old after using a complex technique called cosmogenic nuclide dating.
He used a technique called cosmogenic nuclide dating, which estimates the amount of time rocks have been buried by analyzing particles created when materials are exposed to radiation from space.
He used a technique called cosmogenic nuclide dating, which estimates the amount of time rocks have been buried by analyzing particles created when materials are exposed to radiation from space.
“This is a short-lived nuclide that only exists in the early solar system,” says Noriko Kita, an expert in meteorite aging from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
A nuclide is an atomic nucleus.
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