Abstract
The abundance of cosmic-ray-produced tritium has been measured in a variety of natural waters in the Mississippi Valley, the Chicago area, and in a few places elsewhere in the northern hemisphere. Contents ranging between 0.5 and 67 tritium atoms per hydrogen atoms have been found. These correspond to an average cosmic-ray production rate of about 0.12 tritium atoms per per second if the total rate of transfer of tritium into the oceans by oceanic rain and snow and by rivers carrying continental water is taken as being equal to the total production rate. This is equivalent to assuming short land storage time in terms of eighteen years—the tritium average life. This production rate corresponds to an inventory of about 1800 g, with only about one percent of this in the atmosphere.
The tritium contents of vintage wines appear to agree with the time elapsed since bottling, indicating the tritium abundances over the last eighteen years to have been essentially equal to the present ones. Some of the possible applications of natural tritium to problems of hydrology and meteorology are discussed. The present production rate for tritium corresponds to an escape rate from the earth of about 5× years or less.
- Received 14 December 1953
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.93.1337
©1954 American Physical Society