slowdecaying
Slowdecaying is a qualitative descriptor used across disciplines to characterize processes, signals, or quantities that diminish in magnitude at a relatively gradual pace over time. It contrasts with fast-decaying cases where the quantity falls quickly after an event or initial value. The term is context-dependent and not a formal technical label, but it indicates a long-lasting influence or persistent tail in the observation window.
In physics, slowdecaying is often used to describe radioactive isotopes with long half-lives and metastable states,
In mathematics and engineering, slow decay describes functions or signals whose magnitude decreases slowly as time
To characterize slow decay, researchers use metrics such as half-life, time constant, decay exponent, or tail