Isotope 14 : Isotopes of a given chemical element differ in the number of neutrons present in the nucleus of the atom. Isotopes have similar, but not identical, physical and chemical properties
A. Barrie Pittock (Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization Division of Atmospheric Research), Thomas P. Ackerman (National Aeronautics and Space Administration Ames Research Center), Paul J. Crutzen (Max Planck InstitUl fUr Chemie), Michael C. MacCracken (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Charles S. Shapiro (San Francisco State University and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Richard P. Turco (Rand D Associates In collaboration with: v. Aleksandrov, P. Connell, G. Golitsyn, T. Harvey, S. Kang, K. Peterson, and G. Tripoli), Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment SCOPE 28, Environmental Consequences of Nuclear War Volume I. Physical and Atmospheric Effects, Appendix 2: Glossary, Published on behalf of the Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment SCOPE (The International Council of Scientific Unions ICSU) by John Wiley & Sons, New York, USA 1986. http://dge.stanford.edu/SCOPE/SCOPE_28_1/SCOPE_28- 1_3.2_Appendix2_309-322.pdf, (Env Consequences of Nucl War - Phys & Atm Effects - Amer) {996}