this post was submitted on 14 Sep 2025
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[–] Iron_Lynx@lemmy.world 0 points 1 day ago (2 children)

So I ran the numbers. U-235 decays into Pb-207, which means about 12% of its mass is radiated away in alpha decay. Which sounds like a fuckton.

Also, it'll mean that that chunk of lead will be a touch heavier, at 13.2 lbs

The Maths:U-235 decays into Pb-207. To three significant digits, 207/235 = 0.881, equivalent to 88.1%, meaning 11.9% is radiated away.
88.1% of 15 lbs = 13.2 lbs.

[–] ryannathans@aussie.zone 0 points 1 day ago

And that's ignoring spontaneous fission which is probably happening to some extent to some of the isotopes

[–] sga@piefed.social 0 points 15 hours ago

also, uranium's half life is 700 million years, so we expect (207/235)*7.5 (of lead) + 7.5 (uranium) ~ 14.106382978723405 lump.

also, a lot of the helium produced will remain trapped inside (most heavy metal lumps act as sponges for little gasses). but 700 mil years is also a large amount of time, so much of it would diffuse out. I could checkup diffusion statistics for he d pb-u but i would have to probably do a double integral (as pb-u combination is not fixed, and we can not simply do the error function calculation), so skipping that. but it is safe to say that we will have a lump of ~50% U, 44% pb, and 6% He (by mass), and a significant amount of he will remain in