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Occasionally the half lives are far longer than this, and can last minutes, hours, or (in one known case ) at least 1015 years. Sometimes, the gamma decay from a metastable state is given the special name of an isomeric transition, but save for the long-lived nature of the meta-stable parent nuclear isomer, this process resembles shorter-lived gamma decays in all other aspects.
Excited atomic states decay by fluorescence which usually involves emission of light near the visible range. However, because of the much higher binding energies involved in nuclear processes, most nuclear excited states decay instead by gamma ray emission. For example, a well-known nuclear isomer used in medical procedure is technetium-99m, which decays with a half-life of about 6 hours, by emitting a gamma ray of 140 kiloelectron-volts of energy (this is close to the energy of medical diagnostic X-rays).
Only one very long-lived nuclear isomer (long enough to exist as a primordial element) is found in nature: . This nuclide has the unusual property that the excited state decays with a half life longer than 1015 years while the lower-energy ground state undergoes beta decay (to a different nuclide) with a half-life of only 8 hours. The last process is another kind of radioactive decay, not a decay of a metastable state, since decays of nuclear isomers always result in the same isotope of the same element after the decay is completed.
Metastable isomers of a particular isotope are usually designated with an "m" (or, in the case of isotopes with more than one isomer, m2, m3, and so on). This designation is placed after the mass number of the atom; for example, Cobalt-58m (abbreviated , where 27 is the atomic number of cobalt). Increasing indices, m, m2, etc., correlate with increasing levels of excitation energy stored in each of the isomeric states (e.g., hafnium-177m2 or ).
A different kind of metastable nuclear state (isomer) is the fission isomer or shape isomer. Most actinoid nuclei, in their ground states, are not spherical, but rather spheroidal—specifically, prolate, with an axis of symmetry longer than the other axes (similar to an American football or rugby ball, although with a less pronounced departure from spherical symmetry). In some of these, quantum-mechanical states can exist in which the distribution of protons and neutrons is farther yet from spherical (in fact, about as non-spherical as an American football), so much so that de-excitation to the nuclear ground state is strongly hindered. In general, these states either de-excite to the ground state (albeit far more slowly than a "usual" excited state) or undergo spontaneous fission with half lives of the order of nanoseconds or microseconds—a very short time, but many orders of magnitude longer than the half life of a more usual nuclear excited state. Fission isomers are usually denoted with a postscript or superscript "f" rather than "m", so that a fission isomer in, e.g., plutonium 240 is denoted plutonium-240f or .
The most stable nuclear isomer occurring in nature is , which is present in all tantalum samples at about 1 part in 8,300. Its half-life is at least 1015 years, markedly longer than the age of the universe. This remarkable persistence results from the fact that the excitation energy of the isomeric state is low, and both gamma de-excitation to the ground state (which is radioactive and has a half-life of only 8 hours), and beta decay to hafnium or tungsten are all suppressed, owing to spin mismatches. The origin of this isomer is mysterious, though it is believed to have been formed in supernovae (as are most other heavy elements). When it relaxes to its ground state, it releases a photon with an energy of 75 keV. It was first reported in 1988 by Collins that can be forced to release its energy by weaker x-rays. After 11 years of controversy those claims were confirmed in 1999 by Belic and co-workers in the Stuttgart nuclear physics group.
Another reasonably stable nuclear isomer (with a half-life of 31 years) is , which has the highest excitation energy of any comparably long-lived isomer. One gram of pure contains approximately 1.33 gigajoules of energy, the equivalent of exploding about of TNT. Further, in the natural decay of , the energy is released as gamma rays with a total energy of 2.45 MeV. As with , there are disputed reports that can be stimulated into releasing its energy, and as a result the substance is being studied as a possible source for gamma ray lasers. These reports also indicate that the energy is released very quickly, so that can produce extremely high powers (on the order of exawatts). Other isomers have also been investigated as possible media for gamma-ray stimulated emission.
Holmium has an interesting nuclear isomer, with a half-life of 1,200 years, which is nearly the longest half-life of any holmium radionuclide (only , with a half life of 4,570 years is longer).
has a remarkably low-lying metastable isomer, only 7.6 ± 0.5 electron volts above the ground state, as calculated from spectroscopic measurements. This direct decay has not been observed, however. If this isomer were to decay it would produce a gamma ray (defined by its origin, not its wavelength) in the ultraviolet range. These "ultraviolet gamma rays" were thought to have been detected at one time, but this observation has since been found to be from nitrogen gas excited by higher energy emissions.
Technetium isomers (with a half-life of 6.01 hours) and (with a half-life of 61 days) are used in medical and industrial applications.
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