Note 4: Nuclear Half-Life | Worldwide Effects Of Nuclear War

  1. Home
  2. Resources
  3. Historical Documents
  4. Effects of Nuclear War
  5. Worldwide Effects of Nuclear War
  6. Note 4: Nuclear Half-Life
Worldwide Effects of Nuclear War

Note 4: Nuclear Half-Life

The concept of "half-life" is basic to an understanding of radioactive decay of unstable nuclei. Unlike physical "systems" -- bacteria, animals, men and stars -- unstable isotopes do not individually have a predictable life span. There is no way of forecasting when a single unstable nucleus will decay.

Nevertheless, it is possible to get around the random behavior of an individual nucleus by dealing statistically with large numbers of nuclei of a particular radioactive isotope. In the case of thorium-232, for example, radioactive decay proceeds so slowly that 14 billion years must elapse before one-half of an initial quantity decayed to a more stable configuration. Thus the half-life of this isotope is 14 billion years. After the elapse of second half-life (another 14 billion years), only one-fourth of the original quantity of thorium-232 would remain, one eighth after the third half-life, and so on.

Most manmade radioactive isotopes have much shorter half-lives, ranging from seconds or days up to thousands of years. Plutonium-239 (a manmade isotope) has a half-life of 24,000 years. For the most common uranium isotope, U-238, the half-life is 4.5 billion years, about the age of the solar system. The much scarcer, fissionable isotope of uranium, U-235, has a half-life of 700 million years, indicating that its present abundance is only about 1 percent of the amount present when the solar system was born.

Previous Page 10 of 11 Next Related Reading Book Cover

The Nuclear Arms Race: Technology and Society by Paul Craig, John Jungerman

Related Sections

Glossary of Nuclear Terms

Effects of Radiation on the Human Body

Tag » What Is Half Life Of Uranium