mkarger said:
So a proton cannot exist in it's own state?
If it isolated from conductors or other atoms. In some plasmas that are sufficiently hot, protons and electrons exist freely, and there may be few neutrals, simply because they get smacked by nuclei, electrons, gamma rays or brehmstrahlung.
On earth, we produce protons by stripping away electrons and putting protons in an accelerator in a vacuum, or some kind of magnetic bottle. But protons repel and eventually they can leak out of a magnetic bottle. In general, nature favors neutral atoms.
Free neutrons decay with a half-life of 10.23 minutes. Otherwise, they prefer to be in nuclei.
A deuteron is the nucleus of a deuterium atom (
2H, or D). Deuterium is not too common on earth. A triton is the nucleus of a tritium atom (
3H, or T). It is artifically produced on earth, although deuterons and tritons can be produced by spallation reactions involving solar protons or cosmic rays with terrestrial nuclei. The triton decays to
3He.
Hydrogen is the only element with an isotope that contains no neutrons,
1H or protium. All the other elements have at least one neutron in the nucleus, and there is a stability criterion such that stable nuclei 'generally' have the same number of neutrons as protons or slight surplus of neutrons, but there are exceptions.
8Be is an interesting exception - it's not stable.
12B is another interesting unstable nucleus. Except for
10B and
14N, the light elements with odd numbers of protons tend to be unstable if N=Z, so for stability N>Z.
http://www.nndc.bnl.gov/chart/moveCenter.jsp?move=dl