What about gold is "unstable" now? It's very stable, which is one of the reasons it's considered valuable.
We can, it just takes the blood of 10,000 human beings to power the Philosopher's Stone.
Maybe by making a heavier element that decays into stable gold but has this been discovered yet?
I meant we can make unstable isotopes that decay and are radioactive but not stable good old non RA gold
I think he was just clarifying for me since I didn't understand what was meant by "stable" in the OP.Way to go ignore PottedMeat...
Mercury 198 + 6.8MeV gamma ray -> 1 neutron + Mercury 197 (half-life 2.7 days) -> Gold 197 + 1 positron
Mercury 197 is unstable and decays to lovely gold... (what your question asked for).
We can, it just takes the blood of 10,000 human beings to power the Philosopher's Stone.
You forget something called the Law of Equivalent Exchange.It's because those god damn alchemists haven't figured out a thing in 2500 years. Least productive profession ever.
It's because those god damn alchemists haven't figured out a thing in 2500 years. Least productive profession ever.
LOL, true to some degree although Sir Isaac Newton was heavily into Alchemy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Newton%27s_occult_studies#Newton.27s_alchemical_research_and_writings