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- Newsgroups: alt.cesium
- Path: sparky!uunet!decwrl!pa.dec.com!engage.pko.dec.com!ramblr.enet.dec.com!moroney
- From: moroney@ramblr.enet.dec.com
- Subject: Re: More Cesium facts.
- Message-ID: <1992Sep11.200733.688@engage.pko.dec.com>
- Sender: newsdaemon@engage.pko.dec.com (USENET News Daemon)
- Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation
- Date: Fri, 11 Sep 1992 20:53:29 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- In article <18oeanINNkk6@agate.berkeley.edu>, gezelter@sam.cchem.berkeley.edu (Dan Gezelter) writes...
- >In article <1992Sep10.192511.7334@nntpd.lkg.dec.com> moroney@ramblr.enet.dec.com writes:
-
- >>Something with a half-life of 3*10^6 years won't occur naturally unless it is
- >>the decay product of something else, since it has been about 1333 half-lives
- >>since the formation of the Earth. What's 1/(2^1333)? That's the amount of
- >>the original Cs-135 left, if the earth is 4 billion years old.
-
- >True, except that Cs-135 could be the decay product of something with
- >a much longer half-life, which could be continually restocking the
- >world's supply of Cs-135. Also, Cs in the earth's core could be
- >absorbing neutrons from other nearby sources of radioactivity,
- >bringing the abundance of Cs-135 well above what we would predict
- >using the simple calculation using the age of the earth...
-
- > Anyone know if Cs-135 (or any other Cs isotope for that matter) lies
- >anywhere in another isotope's decay chain?
-
- The isotopic percentages given are for the earth's crust. We cannot do much
- sampling of places like the core, other planets etc. I bet there's a lot
- more heavy stuff such as lead, gold uranium etc. in the core than the
- crust.
-
- Anyway, a check of the CRC of elements neighboring Cs shows no long-lived
- isotopes that decay to Cs-135. Xe-135 does beta-decay to it, but it is
- short-lived (hours), and nothing long-lived decays to it.
-
- However, La-138 is shown as being .09% of natural lanthanum, and it alpha
- decays with a half-life of 1.06E11 years to Cs-134. Cs-134 decays with
- a half-life of 2 years. Due to the long half-life of La-138, the rarity
- of it, and the fairly short half-life of Cs-134, the amount of Cs-134 that
- exists is almost zilch.
-
- -Mike
-