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Radioactive Steel
(mander.xyz)
A place for majestic STEMLORD peacocking, as well as memes about the realities of working in a lab.

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This is a science community. We use the Dawkins definition of meme.
So this is probably a dumb question, but why would "new" lead be any more radioactive than ancient ingots? Wouldn't it be the same age (whenever the deposit was formed) and have decayed the same amount while still in the ground?
I'll go down this rabbit hole for you because I was also curious.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/ancient-roman-lead-physics-archaeology-controversy/
they did a whoopsie, lead 210 comes from uranium 238. every 220 years radioactivity drops 1000x which means that 200-300 year old lead is mostly fine. copper notably doesn't have this problem, is dense and is refined to high degree, at scale. it's good enough to shield most of relatively low energy radiation from that isotope (less than 50kev gammas). couple mm of copper should be plenty for many applications
You can still get Job in metal shop
You won't get the same purity. Not because of worse industrial processes, but because with ancient lead any radioactive impurity normally introduced by the ore had enough time to decay.
We simply can't filter out trace amounts of radioactive material naturally existing in or around the ore as reliable as time can.
Not all of it is stable isotopes. Some of it has traces if radioactive stuff in it, since that stuff usuially decays Into lead, the highest atomic number element with stable isotopes and you might have a really decayed batch that's mostly just lead now but not lead enough for certain uses. Or it has unstable lead isotopes
Yeah all the lead atoms are the same age, whether refined or not. Does refining lead somehow make it radioactive?
Not all lead is formed at the same time, a lot of it is made by decay of other stuff and the decay chains are of different lengths, if I understand this correctly.