How Does One Proton Decay Per Year Impact Our Health?

robertjford80
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We're made of roughly 10^28 protons. Let's imagine that the average lifespan of a proton were 10^28 years even though it is much higher. That would mean one proton per year would decay in our body. How much harm would one proton decay cause us?
 
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I know that. What I'm wondering is how much energy does proton decay release and how much harm would that energy release cause us.
 
robertjford80 said:
how much energy does proton decay release

The decay mode given by Wikipedia's article on proton decay has a net result of ##p \rightarrow e^+ +2 \gamma##. Can you calculate how much energy that would release, corresponding to the difference in mass?
 
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About 100-1000 radioactive decays happen in an average human per second - not from protons, but from other particles. This is a rough estimate, but it is enough to show that proton decays (if possible) are completely negligible. In addion, some high-energetic muons cross a human body each second.
 
Not to mention the (rough) 200 mrem per year from just radon decay.
 
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