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Answer:

The nuclear equation that represents the fusion of two H-2 atoms to form He-3 and one neutron is:

  • [tex]^2_1H+^2_1H{->}^3_2He+^1_0n[/tex]

Explanation:

In a nuclear reaction the nuclides are represented with the chemical symbol preceded by a superscript that represents the mass number (number of protons plus neutrons) and a subscript that represents the atomic number (number of protons).

H-2 is the isotope of hydrogen with 1 proton and 1 neutron, so it is represented as:

  • [tex]^2_1H[/tex]

He-3 is the isotope of helium with 2 protons and 1 neuron, so it is represented as:

  • [tex]^3_2He[/tex]

The neutron is represented as:

  • [tex]^1_0n[/tex]

With that, you represent the nuclear equation for the fusion of two H-2 atoms to form He-3 and one neutron as follows:

  • [tex]^2_1H+^2_1H{->}^3_2He+^1_0n[/tex]

The clue is to check the balance of both mass numbers and atomic numbers:

  • Mass numbers: 2 + 2 = 3 + 1
  • Atomic numbers: 1 + 1 = 2 + 0

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