Some facts about Tritium.
Tritium, which has a half-life of 12 years;
Tritium Tritium Trust and Tritium.
They called it"Tritium water," but it actually wasn't.
Tritium is a man made element not found in nature.
This will include the release versions Tritium, Amine, and Obsidian(TAO).
Tritium can be bred from lithium,
which is abundant in the earth's crust.
Tritium has one proton and two neutrons,
possessing a half life of 12.43 years.
Two of these isotopes are stable,(not radioactive), but Tritium(one proton and two neutrons) is unstable.
Because of the short half life, Tritium does not exist in nature except in trace amounts.
The next step in the sequence of the Tritium release will be the long anticipated
Tritium Trust update.
Tritium contains two neutrons and one proton and is not stable,
decaying with a half-life of 12.32 years.
The third isotope, Tritium, has 1 proton and 2 neutrons,
and is radioactive, decaying with a half-life of 4500 days.
The Tritium Trust update will reactivate some of your highest
interest Trust Keys and will also include significant other Network consensus updates.
Tritium(symbol T,
or 3H), with one proton and two neutrons in each nucleus, is the mass 3 isotope and constitutes about 10- 15 to 10- 16 percent of hydrogen.
This will be followed by Tritium++, which will complete the Tritium series
and act as a cleanup build by including any necessary additions and adjustments to the code base.
Tepco has for years insisted that its purification processes remove strontium and 61 other radioactive elements from the contaminated water but
leaves Tritium, a mildly radioactive element that is difficult to separate from water.
For example, in June 2009 the Ontario Drinking Water Advisory Council recommended lowering the limit from 7,000
Bq/L to 20 Bq/L.[26] According to the NRC, Tritium is the least dangerous radionuclide because it emits
very weak radiation and leaves the body relatively quickly.