User:JWB/todo/nuclide

To do

 * Radical (Chinese character)

Skewed nuclide charts
One vertical step adds not only a proton, but also a number of neutrons. This produces a chart whose entries do not extend as far to the right, and is thus navigable with less horizontal scrolling.
 * 0: Original table is 102 by 160. (counting only nuclides with halflife >1d) Width is 102 instead of 160 only because axes are swapped from normal orientation.
 * 1: Max width of about 60 at end.
 * 2: Max width of about 50 at beginning.
 * 1.5: Banana-shaped, max width at bottom end, about 25 columns. Alternate rows staggered by half-column.
 * 1 then 2: Changes skew at element 50. Max width of about 25 columns in middle; only wide for small number of elements.

Note significance of skew 1 chart
Just an inquiry on how you're doing with the skew 1 chart data. And to note that in this chart you're actually looking at the significance of a chart of isotope data with relation to 2 factors namely: (1) the atomic number, or what I call the deuteron number, and (2) the "extra neutron number" or the A-2Z number, which I think is more significant than the total neutron number, when it comes to atomic stability considerations.WFPMWFPM (talk) 02:01, 30 September 2009 (UTC)

Other drafts
Actinide decay diagram in SVG

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