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  2. Samarium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samarium

    Samarium-149 is an observationally stable isotope of samarium (predicted to decay, but no decays have ever been observed, giving it a half-life at least several orders of magnitude longer than the age of the universe), and a product of the decay chain from the fission product 149 Nd (yield 1.0888%).

  3. Isotopes of samarium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotopes_of_samarium

    Samarium-149 (149 Sm) is an observationally stable isotope of samarium (predicted to decay, but no decays have ever been observed, giving it a half-life at least several orders of magnitude longer than the age of the universe), and a product of the decay chain from the fission product 149 Nd (yield 1.0888%).

  4. Fission products (by element) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fission_products_(by_element)

    Samarium-149 is the second most important neutron poison in nuclear reactor physics. Samarium-151, produced at lower yields, is the third most abundant medium-lived fission product but emits only weak beta radiation. Both have high neutron absorption cross sections, so that much of them produced in a reactor are later destroyed there by neutron ...

  5. Neutron poison - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutron_poison

    Some of the fission products generated during nuclear reactions have a high neutron absorption capacity, such as xenon-135 (microscopic cross-section σ = 2,000,000 barns (b); up to 3 million barns in reactor conditions) [3] and samarium-149 (σ = 74,500 b). Because these two fission product poisons remove neutrons from the reactor, they will ...

  6. Fission product yield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fission_product_yield

    beta decays to very long lived Samarium-147 (half life>age of the universe); has seen some use in radioisotope thermoelectric generators: 1.0888%: Samarium: 149 Sm: Observationally stable: 2nd most significant neutron poison. 0.9% [3] Iodine: 129 I: 15.7 My: Long-lived fission product. Candidate for disposal by nuclear transmutation. 0.4203% ...

  7. Nuclear fission product - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fission_product

    Other fission products, such as xenon-135 and samarium-149, have a high neutron absorption cross section. Since a nuclear reactor must balance neutron production and absorption rates, fission products that absorb neutrons tend to "poison" or shut the reactor down; this is controlled with burnable poisons and control rods.

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  9. Stable nuclide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stable_nuclide

    Samarium-144 (2E) Samarium-146 (α) – probable long-lived primordial radionuclide Samarium-147 (α) – long-lived primordial radionuclide Samarium-148 (α) – long-lived primordial radionuclide; Samarium-149 (α)* Samarium-150 (α) no mass number 151 § Samarium-152 (α) Samarium-154 (2B)* Europium-151 (α) – long-lived primordial ...