Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Isotopes of gold

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Gold (79Au) has one stable isotope, 197Au, and 40 radioisotopes, with 195Au being the most stable with a half-life of 186 days. Gold is currently considered the heaviest monoisotopic element. Bismuth formerly held that distinction until alpha-decay of the 209Bi isotope was observed. All isotopes of gold are either radioactive or, in the case of 197Au, observationally stable, meaning that 197Au is predicted to be radioactive but no actual decay has been observed.[4]

Quick facts Main isotopes, Decay ...
Remove ads

List of isotopes

Summarize
Perspective


More information Nuclide, Z ...
  1. mAu  Excited nuclear isomer.
  2. ()  Uncertainty (1σ) is given in concise form in parentheses after the corresponding last digits.
  3. #  Atomic mass marked #: value and uncertainty derived not from purely experimental data, but at least partly from trends from the Mass Surface (TMS).
  4. #  Values marked # are not purely derived from experimental data, but at least partly from trends of neighboring nuclides (TNN).
  5. Bold italics symbol as daughter  Daughter product is nearly stable.
  6. Bold symbol as daughter  Daughter product is stable.
  7. () spin value  Indicates spin with weak assignment arguments.
  8. Order of ground state and isomer is uncertain.
  9. Theoretically capable of α decay to 189Ir
  10. Potential material for salted bombs
  11. Theoretically predicted to undergo α decay to 193Ir
Remove ads

See also

Daughter products other than gold

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads