"Radiation helps break down toxic waste" (SN: 4/10/99, p. 229)
states that strontium in radioactive waste emits gamma rays. The
only isotope of strontium with a half-life greater than 1 year
is Sr-90, with a half-life of about 28 years. This is the isotope
of concern in high-level waste. Sr-90 and its daughter yttrium-90
are pure beta emitters. They emit no gammas. Their betas are very
energetic and probably also help degrade toxic chemicals.
Jesse Coleman
Tuscumbia, Ala.
Strontium-90 is, indeed, one of the dominant radioactive isotopes in tank waste and emits beta particles, says Donald M. Camaioni of the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, Wash. Its subsequent decay products, however, emit both gamma and beta radiation on their way to becoming stable isotopes. "The chemical effects of gamma and beta radiation differ little," he adds. "Both are ionizing radiation. Gamma just does its damage over a greater distance." Cesium-137, which is both a gamma and a beta emitter and has a 30-year half-life, is also present in large quantities in underground storage tanks. C. Wu