List_of_radioactive_nuclides_by_half-life

List of radioactive nuclides by half-life

List of radioactive nuclides by half-life

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This is a list of radioactive nuclides (sometimes also called isotopes), ordered by half-life from shortest to longest, in seconds, minutes, hours, days and years. Current methods make it difficult to measure half-lives between approximately 10−19 and 10−10 seconds.[1]

10−24 seconds (yoctoseconds)

More information isotope, half-life 10−24 seconds ...

Twenty-three yoctoseconds is the time needed to traverse a 7-femtometre distance at the speed of light—around the diameter of a large atomic nucleus.

10−21 seconds (zeptoseconds)

More information isotope, half-life 10−21 seconds ...

10−18 seconds (attoseconds)

More information isotope, half-life 10−18 seconds ...

10−12 seconds (picoseconds)

More information isotope, half-life 10−12 seconds ...

10−9 seconds (nanoseconds)

More information isotope, half-life 10−9 seconds ...

10−6 seconds (microseconds)

More information isotope, half-life 10−6 seconds ...

10−3 seconds (milliseconds)

More information isotope, half-life 10−3 seconds ...

100 seconds

More information isotope, half-life seconds ...

103 seconds (kiloseconds)

More information isotope, half-life ...

106 seconds (megaseconds)

More information isotope, half-life ...

109 seconds (gigaseconds)

More information isotope, half-life ...

1012 seconds (teraseconds)

More information isotope, half-life ...

1015 seconds (petaseconds)

More information isotope, half-life ...

1018 seconds (exaseconds)

More information isotope, half-life ...

1021 seconds (zettaseconds)

More information isotope, half-life ...

1024 seconds (yottaseconds)

More information isotope, half-life ...

1027 seconds (ronnaseconds)

More information isotope, half-life ...

1030 seconds (quettaseconds)

More information isotope, half-life ...

The half-life of tellurium-128 is over 160 trillion times greater than the age of the universe, which is 4.35×1017 seconds.[6]

See also


Notes

  1. Reaching the limits of nuclear stability, M. Thoennessen, Rep. Prog. Phys. 67 (2004), pp. 1187–1232, §2.3, doi:10.1088/0034-4885/67/7/R04.
  2. Yirka, Bob (April 5, 2023). "Previously unknown isotope of uranium discovered". Phys.org. Retrieved 2023-04-12.
  3. 14
    C
    is used in radiocarbon dating.
  4. Walker, John. "Barely Radioactive Elements". fourmilab.ch. Retrieved 2018-03-09.

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