cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
mikalankrah
New Contributor II

Question from Gawker.com

Are there any atoms in my body right now that used to belong to Abe Lincoln, or Hitler? In other words, do particles of matter on earth get mixed so well by natural processes that when we die, our particles are evenly distributed over the whole world, a little bit everywhere? Or do we just stay in one place as dust? Is it reasonable to guess that our bodies have atoms from all the people/animals/whatever that have died before us?


Please note that your response may potentially be posted on the gawker.com website.

0 Kudos
2 Replies
BryanBalazs
Contributor II

Re: Question from Gawker.com

Although this doesn't fully answer the question, I remember doing an exercise in undergraduate P-Chem in the early 1980s in which we were asked to calculate the chances that a breath that we took would contain a molecule (oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, it didn't matter) of "Caesar's last breath".  The answer turned out to be about 50%, so for every few breaths you take, you have a reasonable chance of breathing in a part of "Caesar's last breath".  We were asked to ignore effects of material transport, atmospheric convection, chemical reactions, etc., which would be a big part of the answer to the original question posed.

0 Kudos

Re: Question from Gawker.com

Dear Mr. Ankrah and Mr. Balazs,

     At first, I simply glanced at your communication tonight.

I thoght that "Oh, what ary they talking about, how leisurely are they discussing?"

But I suddenly noticed my mistake.

I am a Japanese and am reading roughly newspapaer everymorning.

Do you remember the great failure of Fukusima nuclear power plant, Sirs?

That nuclear power plant has been emanating even now the radioactive substance into the pacific ocean  stream. About one year after the great earthquake in Japan, I have heard from the newspaper that at some American coastal region the radioactivity in sea water there, was detected.

It is only one yaer for a radioactive an atom to travel from Asia to North America!

That is a global social problem!

And I am sorry for contaminating the pacific ocean by radioactive substance.

We Japanese usually have been living receiving convenience from that nuclear power plant, without knowing the poignant severe posivility of causing serious fatal disaster for foreign countries.

Is your national sysytem of power plant safe absolutely?

Are you sure?

Sincerely

M.Y.

April 19, 2013

0 Kudos