Production of <sup>40</sup>Ar by an overlooked mode of <sup>40</sup>K decay with implications for K-Ar geochronology
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Published:2020-11-26
Issue:2
Volume:2
Page:355-365
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ISSN:2628-3719
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Container-title:Geochronology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geochronology
Author:
Carter JackORCID, Ickert Ryan B.ORCID, Mark Darren F., Tremblay Marissa M.ORCID, Cresswell Alan J., Sanderson David C. W.
Abstract
Abstract. The decay of 40K to the stable isotopes 40Ca
and 40Ar is used as a measure of time for both the K-Ca and K-Ar
geochronometers, the latter of which is most generally utilized by the
variant 40Ar∕39Ar system. The increasing precision of
geochronology has forced practitioners to deal with the systematic
uncertainties rooted in all radioisotope dating methods. A major component
of these systematic uncertainties for the K-Ar and 40Ar∕39Ar
techniques is imprecisely determined decay constants and an incomplete
knowledge of the decay scheme of 40K. Recent geochronology studies
question whether 40K can decay to 40Ar via an electron capture
directly to ground state (ECground), citing the lack of experimental
verification as reasoning for its omission. In this study, we (1) provide a
theoretical argument in favor of the presence of this decay mode and (2) evaluate the magnitude of this decay mode by calculating the electron
capture to positron ratio (ECground/β+) and comparing
calculated ratios to previously published calculations, which yield
ECground/β+ between 150–212. We provide support for this
calculation through comparison of the experimentally verified
ECground/β+ ratio of 22Na with our calculation using
the theory of β decay. When combined with measured values of β+ and β− decay rates, the best estimate for the
calculated ECground/β+ for 40K yields a partial decay
constant for 40K direct to ground-state 40Ar of 11.6±1.5×10-13 a−1 (2σ). We calculate a partial decay
constant of 40K to 40Ar of 0.592±0.014×10-10 a−1 and a total decay constant of 5.475±0.107×10-10 a−1 (2σ), and we conclude that although omission of
this decay mode can be significant for K-Ar dating, it is minor for
40Ar∕39Ar geochronology and is therefore unlikely to have
significantly biased published measurements.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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