Page:Radio-activity.djvu/521

 The transformation of the radio-elements is thus a transformation of a part per saltum, and not a progressive change of the whole. At any time after the process of transformation has been in progress there will thus remain a part of the matter which is unchanged, and, mixed with it, the products which have resulted from the transformation of the remainder.

The question naturally arises whether the process of degradation of matter is confined to the radio-elements or is a universal property of matter. It will be shown in chapter that all matter, so far examined, exhibits the property of radio-activity to a slight degree. It is very difficult, however, to make certain that the observed radio-activity is not due to the presence in the matter of a slight trace of a radio-element. If ordinary matter is radio-active, it is certain that its activity is much less than that of uranium, and consequently that its rate of transformation must be excessively slow. There is, however, another possibility to be considered. The changes occurring in the radio-elements would probably never have been detected if the change had not been accompanied by the expulsion of charged particles with great velocity. It does not seem unlikely that an atom may undergo disintegration without projecting a part of its system with sufficient velocity to ionize the gas. In fact, we have seen that, even in the radio-elements, several of the series of changes in both thorium, radium, and actinium are unaccompanied by ionizing rays. The experimental results given in Appendix A strongly support this point of view. It may thus be possible that all matter is undergoing a slow process of transformation, which has so far only been detected in the radio-elements on account of the expulsion of charged particles with great velocity during the change. This process of degradation of matter continuing for ages must reduce the constituents of the earth to the simpler and more stable forms of matter.

The idea that helium is a transformation product of radium suggests the probability that helium is one of the more elementary substances of which the heavier atoms are composed. Sir Norman Lockyer, in his interesting book on "Inorganic Evolution," has pointed out that the spectra of helium and of hydrogen predominate in the hottest stars. In the cooler stars the more