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Isotopes of calcium

Calcium (20Ca) has 26 known isotopes, ranging from 35Ca to 60Ca. There are five stable isotopes, plus one isotope (48Ca) with such a long half-life that it is for all practical purposes stable. The most abundant isotope, 40Ca, as well as the rare 46Ca, are theoretically unstable on energetic grounds, but their decay has not been observed. Calcium also has a cosmogenic isotope, 41Ca, with half-life 99,400 years. Unlike cosmogenic isotopes produced in the air, 41Ca is produced by neutron activation of solid 40Ca in rock and soil. Most of its production is in the upper metre of the soil column, where the cosmogenic neutron flux is still strong enough. The most stable artificial isotopes are 45Ca with half-life 162.61 days and 47Ca with half-life 4.536 days. All other calcium isotopes have half-lives of minutes or less.

Calcium-48
Calcium-48 is a doubly magic nucleus with 28 neutrons; unusually neutron-rich for a light primordial nucleus. It decays via double beta decay with an extremely long half-life of about 5.6×10 years, though single beta decay is also theoretically possible. This decay can analyzed with the sd nuclear shell model, and it is more energetic (4.27 MeV) than any other double beta decay. It is used as a precursor for neutron-rich and superheavy isotopes. ==Calcium-60==
Calcium-60
Calcium-60 is the heaviest known isotope . its existence suggests that there are additional even-N isotopes of calcium up to at least Ca, while Ca is probably the last bound isotope with odd N. Earlier predictions had estimated the heaviest even isotope to be at Ca, and Ca unbound. However, subsequent spectroscopic measurements of the nearby nuclides Ca, Ca, and Ti instead predict that it should lie on the island of inversion known to exist around Cr. == See also ==
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