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Spontaneous fission is a form of radioactive
decay characteristic of very heavy isotopes, and is theoretically possible for
uranium and thorium, or indeed for any
atomic nucleus whose mass is greater than or equal to 100 amu
(ruthenium). In practice, however, spontaneous fission is only energetically
feasible for atomic masses above 230 amu (thorium).
For uranium and thorium, the spontaneous fission mode of decay is not seen for the majority of radioactive breakdowns and is
usually neglected except for the exact considerations of branching ratios when determining the activity of a sample containing
these elements. Mathematically, the criterion for whether spontaneous fission can occur is:
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As the name suggests, spontaneous fission follows the exact same process as nuclear fission, only it is not self-sustaining and does not generate the neutron flux necessary to "go
critical" and continue such fissions.
The elements most susceptible to spontaneous fission are the trans-actinide elements, such as rutherfordium.
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