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Half Life Accuracy? |
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| Jul14-12, 04:10 PM | #18 |
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Half Life Accuracy?
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| Jul14-12, 04:35 PM | #19 |
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Mentor
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2. Also due to the nature of the half life, there is no "age" for a single radioactive particle, so no basis for a rate change. If you have a particle with a half life of 10 years and you wait 10 years, there's a 50% it will have decayed. If it didn't decay and you wait another 10 years, odds are still 50%. Just like with flipping a coin -- it has no memory. |
| Jul14-12, 04:43 PM | #20 |
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| Jul17-12, 01:24 AM | #21 |
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Now if you had a plasma of these things at 99999999 degrees K, then fission might occur in the high nuclear mass atoms from thermal energy and nuclear collisions, just a guess. However that's not really "decay" anymore. |
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