First Alert. But 'lifetime' of any smoke is only 10 years.
.........When the battery is dead you throw the detector away and get a new one............
No, you dispose of it properly.
And where does one dispose of a smoke detector properly? :roll:
Oh yeah, in the trash.
Ok so will it down to your kids, it will still work with fresh batteries. however from the NRC in your link quotes;The half life of Americium-241 is more like 430 years, not 10 years. At the 'end of life' of a smoke detector, it is almost as radioactive as when manufactured.
( http://www.epa.gov/radiation/radionuclides/americium.html#properties )
However the amount of Americium-241 in a smoke detectors is quite small, on the order of 1 microcurie (http://home.howstuffworks.com/home-improvement/household-safety/fire/smoke2.htm). Comparing this to 'natural' sources, this is about the same total radioactivity as found in 2 cubic feet of average soil ( http://www.physics.isu.edu/radinf/natural.htm )