Future Shock
Senior member
- Aug 28, 2005
- 968
- 0
- 0
Originally posted by: LeatherNeck
Not quite. Seems like your mixing some findings here. Rutherford's work had to do primarily with radioactive half-life yes but not that the heat generated by radioactive decay was/is a significant heat source.Originally posted by: Future Shock
You are all forgetting one critical factor - the single largest heat source ON earth is radioactive decay, as proven by Ernest Rutherford. Rutherford's work with radioactive decay dating and heating estimates VASTLY increased the estimated age of the earth during the late 1800s. We now know the Earth to be nearly 4 billion years old - before Rutherford's heating theories, the best guesses by scientists like Lord Kelvin were less than 100 million years. So, apparently, that radioactive heating is quiet significant...
FS
U-238 and U-235 with half-lives of about 4 billion years, are among the primary elements used to theorize the age of the earth. While their half-life is a useful indicator of elapsed time, and some heat is generated, nobody is "missing" anything regarding their contribution to the heating of the earth. Some heat is generated but it pales in significance to the heat received by the sun.
Please let me quote from page 146 (paperback edition) of Bill Bryson's excellent "A Short History of Nearly Everything":
At McGill University in Montreal the young New Zealand-born Ernest Rutherford became interested in the new radioactive materiels. With a colleague named Frederick Soddy he discovered that immense reserves of energy were bound up in these small amounts of matter, and that the radioactive decay of these reserves could account for most of the Earth's warmth. They also discovered that radioactive elements decayed into other elements - that one day you had an atom of uranium say, and the next you had an atom of lead. This was truely extraordinary. It was alchemy pure and simple; no-one had ever imagined that such a thing could happen naturally and spontaneously.
Ever the pragmatist, Rutherford was the first to see that there could be a valuable application in this. He noticed that in any sample of radioactive materiel, it always took the same exact amount of time for half the sample to decay - the celebrated half-life - and this steady, reliable rate of decay could be used as a clock....he tested a piece of pitchblend ore, the principle ore of uranium, and found it to be 700 million years old - very much older than the age most people were prepared to grant the earth...
In the spring of 1904, Rutherford travelled to London to give a lecture at the Royal Insititution...Rutherford was there to talk about his new disintegration theory of radioactivity. Tactfully - for the aging Lord Kelvin was present, Rutherford noted that Kelvin himself had suggested that the discovery of some other source of heat would throw his (Kelvin's) calculations of the age of the earth out. Rutherford had found that other source. Thanks to radioactivity the Earth could be - and self-evidentally was - much older than the 24 million years Kelvin's final calculations allowed.
Kelvin beamed at Rutherford's respectful presentation, but was in fact unmoved. He never accepted the revised figures and to his dying day believed his work on the age of the Earth his most astute and important contribution to science - far greater than his work on thermodynamics.
If you have sources that contradict Bryson, please post and we'll discuss. I think that you have been thrown off by the fact that few science textbooks give much light on the Age of the Earth debates that raged on for a century or more, and Kelvin's and Rutherford's roles in them. They present it as very much a fait accompli ("the earth is nearly 4 billion years old") and don't talk in detail as to the immense debates (with obvious religious and evolutioary overtones) that ran for those years.
Future Shock
