Isotopes of europium

Naturally occurring europium (63Eu) is composed of two isotopes, 151Eu and 153Eu, with 153Eu being the more abundant (52.2% natural abundance). While 153Eu is observationally stable, 151Eu was found in 2007 to be unstable and undergo alpha decay; its measured half-life of 4.6 × 1018 years corresponds to 1 alpha decay per two minutes per kilogram of natural europium, so for practical purposes it can be considered stable.

Source: Wikipedia — Isotopes of europium (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Isotopes of europium

Naturally occurring europium (63Eu) is composed of two isotopes, 151Eu and 153Eu, with 153Eu being the more abundant (52.2% natural abundance). While 153Eu is observationally stable, 151Eu was found in 2007 to be unstable and undergo alpha decay; its measured half-life of 4.6 × 1018 years corresponds to 1 alpha decay per two minutes per kilogram of natural europium, so for practical purposes it can be considered stable.

Source: Wikipedia "Isotopes of europium" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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