The feeding probability of 102;104;105;106;107 Tc, 105 Mo, and 101 Nb nuclei, which are important contributors to the decay heat in nuclear reactors, has been measured using the total absorption technique. We have coupled for the first time a total absorption spectrometer to a Penning trap in order to obtain sources of very high isobaric purity. Our results solve a significant part of a long-standing discrepancy in the component of the decay heat for 239 Pu in the 4-3000 s range. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.202501 PACS numbers: 23.40.Às, 27.60.+j, 28.41.Fr, 29.30.Kv Nuclear reactors provide a significant fraction of the world's electricity. A burgeoning population and an associated growth in economic activity suggest that world demand will double by 2050. Until now, the bulk of this has come from the burning of fossil fuels. There is general concern that reserves of fossil fuels are limited and their burning damages the environment. In particular, it contributes to the emission of large amounts of CO 2 . In this context, nuclear power, based on the fission process, will be less damaging to the environment. Accordingly there is now a renaissance in the building of nuclear power stations around the world. Modern reactor designs, based on many years of operating experience, are much more efficient, more economical, and safer than earlier designs. Although the basic principles are well established, we still lack certain information, such as a knowledge of the decay properties of specific nuclei that are important contributors to the heating of the reactor during and after operation. The estimation and control of the heat emitted by the decay of fission products plays a key role in the safe operation of reactors. The primary aim of this work is to study the decay properties of specific nuclei that are important contributors to this source of heat.Approximately 8% of the total energy generated during the fission process is related to the energy released in the natural decay of fission products, and is commonly called decay heat [1]. Once the reactor is shut down, the energy released in radioactive decay provides the main source of heating. Hence, coolant needs to be maintained after termination of the neutron-induced fission process in a reactor, and the form and extent of this essential requirement needs to be specified on the basis of decay-heat summation calculations. Decay heat varies as a function of time after shutdown and can be determined theoretically from known nuclear data. Such computations are based on the inventory of nuclei created during the fission process and after reactor shutdown and their radioactive decay characteristics:where fðtÞ is the power function, E i is the mean decay energy of the ith nuclide ( , , and components), i is the decay constant of the ith nuclide, and N i ðtÞ is the number of nuclide i at cooling time t. These calculations require extensive libraries of cross sections, fission yields, and decay data. Obviously, an accurate assessment of the decay heat is highly relevant...