Uranium has a half life of 5,600 years. After that period, one half of the uranium becomes lead. That is why lead is found in uranium deposits.
The half-life of the isotope uranium-238 is 4 468 000 000 years.
Uranium-238 emits alpha radiation; its half-life is 4,468×109 year.
Radioactive elements tend to degrade or give off radiation at a constant rate. That is an essential part of radioactive carbon dating. Uranium, for instance has a has half life of 5,400 years. Each 5,400 years, half of the uranium becomes inert lead. It is considered an accurate form of dating.
It is not yet discovered since all of the uranium isotopes are having half life for several millions of years. We would be able to find it after atleast 700 millions of years.
someone
Probably Wyoming
I think it's Uranium.
There is no isotope of Uranium 206 - Uranium 217 is the lightest.
Uranium is a radioactive element and conteneously disintegrate into smaller element, that time in which 1g of uranium becomes half g is known as half life period of uranium.
Portugal supplies half the world's cork
Uranium has a half life of 5,600 years. After that period, one half of the uranium becomes lead. That is why lead is found in uranium deposits.
A power grid is responsible for coordinating utility systems in a given area. The northeast power grid in the United States supplies power to over half of the country.
703, 800,000
Each isotope of uranium has its half life. See the link below.
Pu-239 has a half-life of 24,110 years.
If you think to uranium 235 the half life is 703 800 000 years.