Bismuth No Longer the Heaviest Stable Element 78
forii writes "Bismuth-209 was commonly thought to be the heaviest stable element. But now Physicists have discovered that Bi-209 actually is unstable and decays with a halflife of 2*10^19 years. This means that the average 8oz (237ml) bottle of Pepto-Bismol contains one decay event every 36 hours or so."
So... (Score:1)
I can see the headlines now... (Score:5, Funny)
[shock-rag wire service] Scientists discover that bismuth, a major component of Pepto-Bismol , is RADIOACTIVE and decays into the TOXIC POISON thallium.
While the decay rate is the slowest observed to date and, in fact, sets a record, it is noted that NO MINIMUM SAFE EXPOSURE LEVEL has been established for radiation exposure, and there is NO CURE for thallium posioning.
Re:I can see the headlines now... (Score:2)
It's dangerous? KILL IT!!! (Score:2, Funny)
Someone call Starfleet! *KILL IT! *KILL IT!
(*read: start a new government agency dedicated to the analysis and monitoring of this tool-of-terrorists; fund a few dozen fact-finding junkets, c/o the taxpayer; draft an array of pointless laws regarding Bi research, don't forget to call the religious end-of-world nutters for their valuable insight; end up hiring a PR agency to divert attention away from the fact that yo
Re:It's dangerous? KILL IT!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Remember, that's just an average. Your experience may be different. It could decay all at once just after you swallow. You can't be too careful.
Re:It's dangerous? KILL IT!!! (Score:3, Funny)
True, you're far more likely to have the hydrogen atoms in a glass of water spontaneously fuse after you drank it. If the bismuth decayed all at once it would kill you, but if hydrogen fused all at once it would kill everyone in a 50 mile radius.
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Re:It's dangerous? KILL IT!!! (Score:2)
So, fruits are bad - fruits are radioactive. I knew it instinctively since my childhood.
Actually... (Score:2, Interesting)
Bismuth-209 was commonly thought to be the heaviest stable element.
Actually, most of the scientists believed it was stable, however not everyone. (Some of them were considered "crackpots" by the rest of the community, but the point remains valid, even if somewhat less so.) Try a Google search [google.com].
Hence the term "commonly" (Score:1)
The subject says it all.
And the new winner is? (Score:1)
Re:And the new winner is? (Score:1)
Re:And the new winner is? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:And the new winner is? (Score:1)
Re:And the new winner is? (Score:1)
Re:And the new winner is? (Score:1)
Re:And the new winner is? (Score:2)
So the proper answer is, a neutron weighs more than a proton, because a neutron is mass of proton
Re:And the new winner is? (Score:2)
The electric repulsive force, however, is clearly greater
Re:And the new winner is? (Score:1)
Thanks for posting this after markets are closed (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Thanks for posting this after markets are close (Score:2)
What proves that, even it's not considered stable anymore, it's still much more stable than Amazonium (from the IPv4 group in the Periodic Table) or Enronium.
And yet... (Score:2)
Francium? Freedomium (Score:5, Funny)
22 May 2003
Today, the National Institute for Standards and Technology [nist.gov], the civilian agency of the US Government responsible for researching and making available data concerning the physical properties of substances including chemical elements, annouces the discontinued use of francium as the name of the 87th chemical element.
"It's just not appropriate to continue to refer to an element by the name of a nation whose inaction is tantamount to condoning terrorism," said Dr. Hratch G. Semerjian, director of the Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory. "We decided that it would be better to refer to the 87th element as Freedomium in honor of those who died to secure the liberty of our country.
Asked if the agency would once again return to calling the 87th element francium, Semerjian said that the element would not return to its former name. "We are prepared to take whatever action is necessary to liberate any element whose nomenclature is derived from a repressive regime."
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Freedonian (Score:2)
But best of all, it not only swats those durn Freedomch types, it commemerates the great citizens of Freedonia, ever fighting for their country - led by the most excellent Rufus T. Firefly, and Mrs. Teasdale.
And in time of war never forget the immortal words of President Firefly :
"And remember while you're out th
Re:Francium? Freedomium (Score:2)
Actually, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry is the governing body on element names.. [iupac.org]
2*10^19? (Score:3, Interesting)
So at the big crunch... (Score:3, Funny)
For the non-chemists/physisicists like me... (Score:3, Interesting)
How does quantum mechanics apply to decay?
Does an atom decay when a certain set of positions occur within it, and if so why can't the frequency that this would occur at be calculated?
Re:For the non-chemists/physisicists like me... (Score:5, Informative)
In the article, it mentions that people actually have predicted this decay using theory. The nucleus is not completely understood, but the theory of basic decay phenomena is pretty complete.
Any time you talk about the quanta of physics, you need to use quantum mechanics. The quanta are of course the so-called fundamental particles, including the proton, neutron and electron.
The nucleus is held together by the strong force. This force must be very strong to keep the protons, whose like charge repels one another, very close together. The strong force only pulls over very short distances: if some nucleons get far enough, their electromagnetic repulsion will continue to push each other apart and they will be separated permanently.
However, the particles in the nucleus don't have enough energy to get over the hump, so nuclei are stable. This is where quantum mechanics applies. Even if the hump is very tall, the nonlocality of quantum mechanics means that some particles can escape if the hump isn't very wide. Because they have a probabilistic spread in space, some of them can creep to the other side. When they get lucky like this, a nuclear decay occurs. The details of the nucleus determine how high the barrier and how wide the hump, both of which affect the probability of tunneling.
In stable nuclei, particles are prohibited from escaping. In this case, it's not that the hump is too high, but that it's asymmetrical. If the nuclear force is strong enough compared to the energy of the nucleons, it can dig a deep well for the particles. In this case, having some possibility of getting past the hump doesn't really help: the area on the other side of the hump is prohibited regardless.
One way to think of this process is to say that quantum mechanics would allow you to borrow the energy you need to jump over a fence as long as you fell back down on the other side, no matter how tall the fence.
But you can't keep the borrowed energy, so you could never jump to the top of a roof, even if it were no taller than the wall you just jumped over.
Re:For the non-chemists/physisicists like me... (Score:1)
I don't have a physics degree, but I'm pretty sure I understand that the Weak force can alter quark flavor, and that this constitutes a completely different decay mechanism from the one you described (not that the one you described is wrong). Am I confused?
Re:For the non-chemists/physisicists like me... (Score:2, Informative)
You are right about the role of the weak force. The process you are thinking of is beta decay. In this process a neutron is converted into a proton, an electron and an antineutrino.
Beta decay is detected by looking for beta particles, also known as electrons. This is another interesting p
Re:For the non-chemists/physisicists like me... (Score:1)
Re:For the non-chemists/physisicists like me... (Score:1)
But you can't keep the borrowed energy, so you could never jump to the top of a roof, even if it were no taller than the wall you just jumped over.
Well, most of the time you can't keep the energy. Hawking Radiation is, however, a case where one of the particles does get to keep the borrowed energy.
Hawking Radiation is covered will in this USA today article [usatoday.com].
Re:For the non-chemists/physisicists like me... (Score:2)
Hawking radiation is where you're borrowing energy from the black hole, not the vaccuum. That's why you can 'keep' it - because it's actually just a very slow reaction of
First Nitpick Post! (Score:5, Informative)
Incidentally, all elements have unstable isotopes. Bismuth's are pretty rare, but they do exist [jlab.org]!
Bismuth obsessive will rejoice in the web site of the Bismuth Producers Association [bismuth.be].
I prefer Tums, myself.
Second Nitpick Post! (Score:4, Informative)
Third Nitpick Post (Score:2)
Re:Third Nitpick Post (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Third Nitpick Post (Score:3, Funny)
"Contained" is right! (Score:3, Interesting)
Not only that, he never said "it's" when he meant "its".
My favorite element, by the way, is Osmium. It sublimates dreadfully toxic fumes from a solid state at room temperature, and nobody knows exactly what its specific gravity is, nor whether it or Iridium is the heaviest element.
Re:"Contained" is right! (Score:1)
Re:"Contained" is right! (Score:2)
Look, if you're going to sarcastic, I'm afraid that I have to nitpick your post. The question is whether osmium or iridium is the densest element, not the heavest.
Quite right that the alphas can't get through the glass--they won't even trav
Proton decay (Score:5, Interesting)
This could prove to be the most important use of this technique, as most proposed Grand Unified Theories have interactions that can turn quarks into leptons, so that a proton would be expected to eventually decay into a positron and a meson. Unfortunately, this process has never been observed (well, only somewhat unfortunately, as high proton stability is definitely a Good Thing in most ways), and experiment and theory have thus set a lower bound on the lifetime of a proton of roughly 10^33 years, about 23 orders of magnitude greater than the estimated current age of the universe.
As you can see, compared to the suggested lifetime of a proton, even Bi-209 seems unstable. The expected extreme rarity of a proton decay event, however, is somewhat balanced by the overwhelming abundance of protons in the universe.The "lifetime" for an individual proton is more like a life expectancy, an average figure- given a suitably large collection of protons, odds are good that at least one would decay in a reasonable timeframe. If you carefully watch 10^33 protons for a year, for example, and reality agrees with theory (big if), then it is likely (certainly not guaranteed though) you will see at least one decay event. Now, 10^33 may sound like a tremendous amount, but remember that each proton has a mass of only 1.67*10^-27 kilograms, so that 10^33 protons would have a mass of about 1,600 metric tons- a lot, but not outrageous.
The real problem lies in that "carefully watching" part. So many other forms of radiation are much more prevalent, and so might mask the signature of proton decay. Cosmic rays, naturally occuring radioisotopes in places you'd never think to look, solar neutrinos, that sort of thing. Ah, why yes, this is one of those experiments they do in a salt mine and uses a gigantic tank of ultrapure water (your proton source). However, as of yet, no one has found concrete evidence for proton decay from one of these experiments. Go here [umich.edu] for a excellent site about a proton decay detector that ran in the 80s, and here [rl.ac.uk] for one currently in use.
Perhaps this process will detect this very rare event, lending profound support to one of the many supersymmetric models out there. Unfortunately, if it does not detect proton decay, it will be much more difficult to say just what the result means, it being difficult to prove a negative and all.
Every element unstable if you wait long enough (Score:1, Informative)
Thus, "stable" is probably not really a Boolean thing.
somewhat OT isotope question (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:somewhat OT isotope question (Score:4, Informative)
Another way that D2O differs from regular H2O. [webexhibits.org]
Re:somewhat OT isotope question (Score:3, Informative)
No! Deuterium behaves chemically exactly like hydrogen-1 (protium) in the compounds that it forms. The physical properties are slightly different (heavy water--deuterium oxide--is denser, and has higher freezing and boiling points. Heavy water ice cubes will sink in a glass of regular water.) Problems arise simply because of its added mass.
Re:somewhat OT isotope question (Score:2)
Did I say anything of the sort? I said that the hydrogen bonding properties are different, and they are, because of the added mass. Hence the change in chemical kinetics that you describe.
Re:somewhat OT isotope question (Score:2)
The problem is that some reaction have large "kinetic isotope effect", which usualy means - in case of deuterium-exchanged molecules - that heavy isotope carbon-deuterium bonds are metabolised at slower rate. Enzymatic reaction do this alot. Oxygen and carbon are other examples - although the effect is not as large as with hydrogen.
Living orga
Re:somewhat OT isotope question (Score:2)
Re:somewhat OT isotope question (Score:1)
p(x) = exp(-U(x)/k_BT))
However the reaction rate is also proportional to the average velocity, which again is proportional to sqrt(m k_B T). Here m is some suitable mass, which will depend on the isotopes.
Re:somewhat OT isotope question (Score:2)
Specifically, what is U(x)?
In chemical kinetics U(x), or more properly (delta)U(x) is the energy difference between the stable state and the transition state. When a lighter isotope is substituted with a heavier isotope, the zero point vibrational energy levels all lower in energy. The same thing occurs for the transition state, except that the energy drops less in the transition state. This results in a higher effect
Re:somewhat OT isotope question (Score:1)
E = U(x) + T(p)
Here x denotes positions of nuclei, whereas p denotes momenta of nuclei. The kinetic energy T(p) is dependent on masses. whereas U is the potential energy denotes the electronic ground state with fixed nuclei at posi
Re:somewhat OT isotope question (Score:2)
Re:somewhat OT isotope question (Score:1)
Heavy water toxicity (Score:2, Informative)
caught on tape (Score:1)
"None of your fricken bismuth!"
thallium oxide (Score:1)
Oh, no! The Pak [larryniven.org] will take over! ... eventually
they already knew about this (Score:2, Funny)
http://www.pepto-bismol.com/faqs.htm#8
How do I read the expiration Date? Can I use Pepto-Bismol® past the expiration date?
Expiration date example:
EXP JL02C0041
EXP = expires
JL = indicates the month (July)
02 = indicates the last digits of the year (2002)
C0041 = indicates plant and production information
If your Pepto-Bismol® has expired, please do not use it. The ingredients may not be stable after the expiration date.
that would be E
Drug expiration dates (Score:2)
A sample is kept from each lot of a drug that's shipped. It's put in a box and kept in a closet somew
Are any isotopes of any element stable? (Score:1)
Re:Are any isotopes of any element stable? (Score:2)
Re:Are any isotopes of any element stable? (Score:1)
Good point. You may care to know that the Department of Energy [lbl.gov] has the the halflife of free neutrons [lbl.gov] is about 10 minutes 15 seconds.
They have not changed Bi-209 [lbl.gov]'s page yet. I think it will take them some time.
I thought this was old news! (Score:3, Informative)
In principle there are no stable nuclei heavier than iron 56. If you have a nucleus with atomic number A and atomic weight X, and you add up the binding energy of that nucleus, and compare it to the sum of the binding energies of an alpha particle and of a daughter nucleus with atomic number A-2 and atomic weight X-4, you will find that alpha decay is at least a little energetically favorable for many nuclei heavier than iron.
If alpha decay is energetically favorable for a nucleus, then that nucleus is not stable. Alpha decay is a barrier tunneling process. If there's a potential energy drop on the other side of the barrier, the barrier will get tunneled through by an enterprising alpha particle eventually. It's just a matter of how long it will take- which is determined by the barrier width and the magnitude of the potential energy difference. The only reason many elements (iodine, gold, mercury, lead, etc.) are considered stable by human beings is that their decays have never been observed- because they are difficult to observe within human time scales. You might have to set up your experiment and wait for years, maybe centuries, before you see a decay. A bottle of mercury might contain two alpha decays per century. Is mercury stable? Not really, but for all practical purposes it is. It's all in the eye of the beholder.
So it seems someone has caught bismuth in the act. Does this mean lead is now the heaviest stable nucleus? No, absolutely not. Lead has some advantages over bismuth- even numbers of neutrons and protons, etc. Pb-208 will definitely have a longer half life than Bi-209. Determining the half life of Pb 208 is going to be hard. But quantitative differences aside, the only real difference between lead and bismuth is that bismuth got caught!
Re:I thought this was old news! (Score:1)
http://education.jlab.org/itselemental/iso083.h
Unintended Consequences (Score:2)
how do they know? (Score:2)
How does this relate to naturally formed Bi? (Score:1)
Re:How does this relate to naturally formed Bi? (Score:1)