hydrogen-4
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hydrogen-4
Summary
hydrogen-4 is an isotope of hydrogen[1]. hydrogen-4 draws 15 Wikipedia views per month (isotope_of_hydrogen category, ranking #3 of 4).[2]
Key Facts
- hydrogen-4's image is recorded as Hydrogen-4.png[3].
- hydrogen-4's instance of is recorded as isotope of hydrogen[4].
- hydrogen-4's follows is recorded as tritium[5].
- hydrogen-4's subclass of is recorded as hydrogen[6].
- hydrogen-4's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03yy4z[7].
- hydrogen-4's decays to is recorded as tritium[8].
- hydrogen-4's atomic number is recorded as {'amount': '+1'}[9].
- hydrogen-4's spin quantum number is recorded as {'amount': '+2.0'}[10].
- hydrogen-4's parity quantum number is recorded as {'amount': '-1'}[11].
- hydrogen-4's neutron number is recorded as {'amount': '+3'}[12].
- hydrogen-4's mass is recorded as {'unit': 'Q483261', 'amount': '+4.026431868'}[13].
- hydrogen-4's half-life is recorded as {'unit': 'Q1777507', 'amount': '+0.0000001391'}[14].
- hydrogen-4's binding energy is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28719934', 'amount': '+6881.796'}[15].
- hydrogen-4's mass excess is recorded as {'unit': 'Q28719934', 'amount': '+24621.127'}[16].
- hydrogen-4's Wolfram Language entity code is recorded as Entity["Isotope", "Hydrogen4"][17].
Why It Matters
hydrogen-4 draws 15 Wikipedia views per month (isotope_of_hydrogen category, ranking #3 of 4).[2] hydrogen-4 has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] hydrogen-4 is known by 20 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]