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  2. Environmental radioactivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_radioactivity

    The concentration of all these isotopes in the Irish Sea attributable to nuclear facilities such as Sellafield has significantly decreased in recent decades. An important part of the Chernobyl release was the caesium-137, this isotope is responsible for much of the long term (at least one year after the fire) external exposure which has ...

  3. Radioactivity in the life sciences - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radioactivity_in_the_life...

    In the case of the hydrogen isotope tritium (half-life = 12.3 years) and carbon-14 (half-life = 5,730 years), these isotopes derive their importance from all organic life containing hydrogen and carbon and therefore can be used to study countless living processes, reactions, and phenomena.

  4. Environmental isotopes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_isotopes

    Of the different isotopes that exist, one common classification is distinguishing radioactive isotopes from stable isotopes. Radioactive isotopes are isotopes that will decay into a different isotope. For example, 3 H is a radioactive isotope of hydrogen. It decays into 3 He with a half-life of ~12.3 years.

  5. Radioactive decay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radioactive_decay

    This isotope has one unpaired proton and one unpaired neutron, so either the proton or the neutron can decay to the other particle, which has opposite isospin. This particular nuclide (though not all nuclides in this situation) is more likely to decay through beta plus decay (61.52(26) % [27]) than through electron capture (38.48(26) % [27]).

  6. Radionuclide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radionuclide

    They have shorter half-lives than primordial radionuclides. They arise in the decay chain of the primordial isotopes thorium-232, uranium-238, and uranium-235. Examples include the natural isotopes of polonium and radium. Cosmogenic isotopes, such as carbon-14, are present because they are continually being formed in the atmosphere due to ...

  7. Isotope analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotope_analysis

    Stable isotopes assist scientists in analyzing animal diets and food webs by examining the animal tissues that bear a fixed isotopic enrichment or depletion vs. the diet. Muscle or protein fractions have become the most common animal tissue used to examine the isotopes because they represent the assimilated nutrients in their diet.

  8. There are only 76 of These Massive Animals Left - AOL

    www.aol.com/only-76-massive-animals-left...

    Today, you can only find Javan rhinos in one place on Earth, the Ujung Kulon National Park in Indonesia. ... Because they require a lot of calories to support their massive bodies (2,000 to 5,100 ...

  9. Isotope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotope

    The 146 even-proton, even-neutron (EE) nuclides comprise ~58% of all stable nuclides and all have spin 0 because of pairing. There are also 24 primordial long-lived even-even nuclides. As a result, each of the 41 even-numbered elements from 2 to 82 has at least one stable isotope, and most of these elements have several primordial isotopes ...