Radioactive decay is the process by which an excited, unstable atomic nucleus loses energy by emitting radiation in the form of particles or electromagnetic waves, thereby transitioning toward a more stable state.
The atomic nucleus comprises certain combinations of protons and neutrons  held in a stable configuration through a precise balance of powerful  forces: The strong force holding the protons and neutrons together is  powerful but very short range; the electrostatic  repulsion of the positively charged protons is less powerful but long  range; the weak force makes the neutron inherently unstable and will  turn it into a proton if given the chance. This balance is very  delicate: a uranium-238 nucleus has a half-life of 4.5 billion years while uranium-237 with just one less neutron has a half-life of 1.3 minutes.
If there is an imbalance in these forces, the system will eventually  shed the excess by ejecting radiation in some combination of particles  and wave energy. The most common radioactive decays occur in response to  one of three possible types of imbalance. If the nucleus has too many  neutrons, one of its neutrons decays (through beta decay)  into one proton plus two fragments ejected from the nucleus, a neutrino  and an electron (called a a beta particle). If the nucleus has too many  protons, it undergoes alpha decay by ejecting two protons and two neutrons as an alpha particle. If the nucleus is excited (has too much energy) it ejects a gamma ray.


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