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fossils
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Pressure does not affect the rate of radioactive decay. That is entirely unaffected by the environment within the nucleus of the atom.
The rate cannot be changed.
Radioactive
fossils
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decay at a constant rate
The ticking of a clock is constant, occurring at a steady rhythm/frequency. While the decay of radioactive elements cannot be determined at a particular point in time, they do decay at a fairly steady rate over time. This allows you to statistically determine the rate at which a mass of radioactive material will steadily decay. So, the decay rate is steady, predictable, and follows a sort of rhythm over time just like the ticking of a clock.
radioactive decay
According to earlier theory: The rate of radioactive decay can never be changed.But conflicting claims have recently appeared. Claims about how temperature appears to have an effect on the decay rate of some elements. The distance from the sun appears to have an effect as well.
The ticking of a clock is constant, occurring at a steady rhythm/frequency. While the decay of radioactive elements cannot be determined at a particular point in time, they do decay at a fairly steady rate over time. This allows you to statistically determine the rate at which a mass of radioactive material will steadily decay. So, the decay rate is steady, predictable, and follows a sort of rhythm over time just like the ticking of a clock.
The ticking of a clock is constant, occurring at a steady rhythm/frequency. While the decay of radioactive elements cannot be determined at a particular point in time, they do decay at a fairly steady rate over time. This allows you to statistically determine the rate at which a mass of radioactive material will steadily decay. So, the decay rate is steady, predictable, and follows a sort of rhythm over time just like the ticking of a clock.
ernest Rutherford _______________________________________________________________ Radioactive decay was actually discovered in 1896 by Henri Bacquerel. Ernest Rutherford discovered the formula of radioactive decay (Such as the falk-life, differences between alpha and beta decay and even how the elements become new elements after the decay), but he did not discover the radioactive decay himself.
radioactive decay
The ticking of a clock is constant, occurring at a steady rhythm/frequency. While the decay of radioactive elements cannot be determined at a particular point in time, they do decay at a fairly steady rate over time. This allows you to statistically determine the rate at which a mass of radioactive material will steadily decay. So, the decay rate is steady, predictable, and follows a sort of rhythm over time just like the ticking of a clock.
Pressure does not affect the rate of radioactive decay. That is entirely unaffected by the environment within the nucleus of the atom.