Naturally occurring zirconium (40Zr) is composed of four stable isotopes (one, 94Zr, may in the future be found radioactive), and one very long-lived radioisotope (96Zr), a primordial nuclide that decays via double beta decay with an observed half-life of 2.34 × 1019 years; it can also undergo single beta decay, which is not yet observed, but the theoretically predicted value of t1/2 is 2.4 × 1020 years. The second most stable radioisotope is 93Zr, which has a half-life of 1.61 million years. Thirty other radioisotopes have been observed from 77Zr to 114Zr; all have half-lives less than a day except for 95Zr (64.032 days), 88Zr (83.4 days), and 89Zr (78.36 hours). The most stable of the isomeric states is just 4.16 minutes for 89mZr.