Talk:Isotopes of hydrogen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is part of Wikipedia:Wikiproject Isotopes. Please keep style and phrasings consistent across the set of pages. For later reference and improved reliability, data from all considered multiple sources is collected here. References are denoted by these letters:

  • (A) G. Audi, O. Bersillon, J. Blachot, A.H. Wapstra. The Nubase2003 evaluation of nuclear and decay properties, Nuc. Phys. A 729, pp. 3-128 (2003). — Where this source indicates a speculative value, the # mark is also applied to values with weak assignment arguments from other sources, if grouped together. An asterisk after the A means that a comment of some importance may be available in the original.
  • (B) National Nuclear Data Center, Brookhaven National Laboratory, information extracted from the NuDat 2.1 database. (Retrieved Sept. 2005, from the code of the popup boxes).
  • (C) David R. Lide (ed.), Norman E. Holden in CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 85th Edition, online version. CRC Press. Boca Raton, Florida (2005). Section 11, Table of the Isotopes. — The CRC uses rounded numbers with implied uncertainties, where this concurs with the range of another source it is treated as exactly equal in this comparison.
  • (D) More specific level data from reference B's Levels and Gammas database.
  • (E) Same as B but excitation energy replaced with that from D.
  Z   N refs symbol   half-life                      spin              excitation energy
  1   0 AB  |H-1     |STABLE                        |1/2+
  1   0 C   |H-1     |>2.8E+23 a                    |1/2+
  1   1 ABC |H-2     |STABLE                        |1+
  1   2 AB  |H-3     |12.32(2) a                    |1/2+
  1   2 C   |H-3     |12.33 a                       |1/2+
  1   3 A   |H-4     |139(10)E-24 s [3.28(23)MeV]   |2-
  1   3 B   |H-4     |[4.6(9) MeV]                  |2-
  1   3 C   |H-4     |[~3 MeV]                      |2-
  1   4 A*  |H-5     |>910E-24 s [<0.5 MeV]         |(1/2+)
  1   4 B   |H-5     |[5.7 MeV]                     |
  1   4 C   |H-5     |[1.9(4) MeV]                  |
  1   5 A   |H-6     |290(70)E-24 s                 |2-#
  1   5 BC  |H-6     |[1.6(4) MeV]                  |(2-)
  1   6 A   |H-7     |23(6)E-24# s [20(5)# MeV]     |1/2+#
  1   6 B   |H-7     |29(7)E-23 y [sic]             |

Femto 16:34, 19 November 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Talk


[edit] Half-lives

Some of the half-lives in the article were of dubious precision. I adjusted them according to above sources, until someone finds more specialized references. Femto 16:34, 19 November 2005 (UTC)

Also the half-lives are different than those on the pages for the specific isotopes, don't know which are the correct ones, but it has to be changed at either the specific pages or here. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen-5 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen-4

[edit] Exotic atoms

Why exactly is muonium mentioned in this article, and why only muonium and not also some other exotic atoms like positronium? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.194.236.251 (talk) 16:31, 15 September 2007 (UTC)

I also wonder why Muonium is mentioned here. Does Muonium have some special connection to isotopes of hydrogen?—Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.230.161.164 (talkcontribs) 20:29, 10 November 2007

Does Tritium decay by Beta - or Beta +? Statue2 11:55, 8 October 2007 (UTC)