nuclear physics ☢️ Flashcards

1
Q

What are isotopes

A

atoms of the same element that have the same proton number but different nucleon number.

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2
Q

What are nucleons

A

Protons and Neutrons.

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3
Q

What force binds the protons and neutrons together

A

“Strong Nuclear force”

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4
Q

When does a nucleus disintegrate

A

When it is unstable

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5
Q

When is a nucleus considered unstable

A

When the atom has extra neutrons or protons it creates extra energy in the nucleus and causes the atom to become unbalanced or unstable.

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6
Q

What does it mean for nucleus to disintegrate

A

The nucleus breaks up and radiates a tiny particle in order to achieve stability

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7
Q

What does it mean for a material to be radioactive

A

The material emits nuclear radiation

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8
Q

What is the meaning of “radioactive decay”

A

Disintegrations of a heavy nucleus which is random and spontaneous. They can result in the emission of α-particles or β-particles and/or γ-radiation.

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9
Q

What does it mean to have an ionizing effect

A

Ability to remove electrons from atoms in its path. This makes all the atoms in its path ions

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10
Q

What are the 3 types of radiation

A

Alpha
Beta
Gamma

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11
Q

What is each radiation stopped by

A

Alpha - 1 sheet of paper
beta - A sheet of aluminium
gamma - 2 cm or more of lead/thick lead/50 cm of concrete (reduces intensity not fully stop)

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12
Q

Speed of 3 radiations

A

Alpha - slowest of 3 = 0.1 * c
beta - faster than alpha, slower than gamma = 0.9 * c
gamma - fastest = c

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13
Q

Mass of 3 radiations

A

Alpha - heaviest
beta - lighter than alpha, heavier than gamma
gamma - none

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14
Q

Relative charges and ionizing powers of 3 radiations

A

Alpha = +2, strong ionizing
Beta = -1, weak ionizing
gamma = 0, very weak ionizing

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15
Q

Effects of electromagnetic fields on 3 radiation

A

Alpha and beta - deflected by magnetic and electric fields
Gamma - Not deflected by any fields

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16
Q

What are alpha particles made off

A

2 protons, 2 neutrons.

Similar structure to nucleus of helium

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17
Q

What are beta particles made off

A

Each particle is an electron

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18
Q

What are gamma particles made off

A

Electromagnetic waves similar to X rays

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19
Q

Why are alpha and beta particles deflected in fields

in a magnetic field -
in an electric field -
which gets deflected more in both and which diretion

A

Alpha beam - flow of positively charged particles (same flow as current)
Beta particles - electrons (flow opp to current)

In a magnetic field - both follow flemings left hand rule

In an electric field - if they pass 2 oppositely charged plates, they experience a force

Beta particles deflected more in both since its lighter but in the opposite direction to alpha particles since charges are opposite

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20
Q

how can the deflection of alpha and beta rays in magnetic fields be found?

A

alpha particles are heavy and a flow of positively charged particles, so it is equivalent to an electric current, hence we can use Flemings’ left-hand rule to find the direction of deflection. As it is heavy it is deflected less

(since its positive, its the same direction as conventional current hence alpha is left hand rule and beta is the opp of wtv alpa is)

beta particles are much lighter and are a flow of negatively charged particles so it is equivalent to an electron flowing in a magnetic field, which is the opposite direction of the current flow. As it is light it deflects more

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21
Q

background radiation definition

A

Background radiation is the radiation that is present all around in the environment

22
Q

what are the factors that make a significant contribution to background radiation

A

radon gas (in the air)
rocks and buildings
food and drink
cosmic rays

23
Q

how is a Geiger muller tube used to detect alpha particles

A

if an alpha particle enters the tube, sparks are produced towards the negative plate and a big and loud sound is created

24
Q

how is a Geiger muller tube used to detect beta particles

A

if a beta particle enters the tube, sparks are produced towards the positive plate, this spark is fast and a low sound is produced

25
Q

how is a Geiger muller tube used to detect gamma particles

A

if a gamma particle enters the tube, trail of sparks, no sound and no deflection occurs

26
Q

what are the 3 possible apparatuses a GM tube can be connected to

what does each do

A

ratemeter - How many of that radiations particles are detected per second. Eg: 100 alpha particles detected per second so the reading is 100 counts per second.
scaler - total number of particles detected by the GM tube
amplifier and loudspeaker - makes a ‘click’ sound when a particle or burst of gamma radiation is detected

27
Q

what is a corrected count rate

A

the count rate subtracted by the background radiation count

28
Q

properties of alpha decay

A

decreases the mass number by 4
atomic number decreases by 2
doesn’t form isotopes but rather a new element altogether
produces a helium atom
eg: parent nuclei —> parent nuclei (mass no -4, proton no -2) + helium (mass no 4, proton no 2)

29
Q

properties of beta decay

A

beta particles breakdown a neutron into 3 parts
proton
electron
antineutrino (fast moving massless, chargeless particle)
no change in the mass number since one neutron gets converted to one proton
beta proton number decreases by 1
the atoms proton number increases by 1

30
Q

what kind of particle is an alpha, gama and beta

A

gamma is electromagnetic
beta is electron
alpha is a helium nucleus

31
Q

How does risk of exposure to radiation vary

A

Greater the intensity of the radiation and longer the exposure the greater the risk

32
Q

Effects of ionising nuclear radiations on living things

A

Mutations - Changes in genetic instructions which may grow abnormally and cause cancer

cell death

33
Q

Which radiation is most harmful and why

A

Alpha radiation - highest ionizing power

34
Q

Which radiations are potentially harmful to internal organs and which arent.

A

Harmful - beta and gamma because they can penetrate through to the internal organs.

Not harmful - Alpha particles. They can’t penetrate the skin and hence can’t reach the internal organs.

35
Q

Why is radioactive gas and dust especially harmful

A

They are taken in the body with air, food and drinks

36
Q

Give an equation in terms of parent nucleus, daughter nucleus and decay products.

A

Parent nucleus —> daughter nucleus + decay products

37
Q

What happens when an unstable nucleus undergoes Alpha decay

A

Original isotope loses 2 protons and 2 neutrons

38
Q

What happens when a particle undergoes beta decay

A

A neutron becomes a proton
An electron and an anti-neutrino is given out

39
Q

What happens in gamma emission

A

When beta or alpha decay take place, protons and neutrons rearrange themselves to become more stable. They lose energy when they do this. That lost energy is emitted as a burst of gamma radiation

40
Q

What is a half-life of a particular isotope

A

time taken for half the nuclei of that isotope in any sample to decay

41
Q

What is activity
What is the unit

A

Average number of disintegrations per second is known as the activity

Unit: Becquerel (Bq)

42
Q

What is the stability line

What is above the stability line? What happens

What is below the stability line? What happens

what happens to the heaviest isotopes

A

Stable isotopes lie on the stability line

Isotopes above the stability line have too many neutrons to be stable. They undergo beta- (electron) decay to reduce the number of neutrons.

Isotopes below the stability line have too few neutrons to be stable. They undergo beta+ (positron) decay to increase the number of neutrons.

Heaviest isotopes decay by alpha emission.

43
Q

In a cathode-ray tube, a hot tungsten cathode releases particles by thermionic emission.
What are these particles?

A

electrons

44
Q

a radioactive nucleus emits a beta particle
what happens to the proton number of the nucleus of the atom

A

proton number increases by 1

45
Q

what is always a product of nuclear fission

A

neutron

46
Q

How many isotopes can an atom have

A

more than one

47
Q

In which decay does the nucleus change to a diff element

A

α-decay or β-decay

48
Q

2 economic issues involved in the storage of radioactive materials with very long half-lives

A

high cost of storage/shielding/guarding/ need to store for a long time

OR reduction in tourism

OR loss of farming produce/land

OR reduction of land/property values

49
Q

2 social issues involved in the storage of radioactive materials with very long half-lives

A

fear of cancer/ causes cancer/genetic mutations/radiation sickness in people/ animals

OR local objections

OR cause people to move away

50
Q

2 environmental issues involved in the storage of radioactive materials with very long half-lives

A

crop mutations

OR leakage into water supplies

OR pollution of atmosphere/water supply

51
Q

Why are alpha particles more stongly ionising than beta particles

A

larger charge (+2 vs -1)

slower moving

more massive/greater volume/ more chance of collision