Chapter 19 - Radioactivity Flashcards

1
Q

What does a radioactive substance contain which causes it to be radioactive?

A

An unstable nuclei

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2
Q

How does a radioactive substance become stable?

A

By emitting radiation

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3
Q

What are the 3 main types of radiation?

A

Alpha, beta, gamma

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4
Q

What is true about the timing of radioactive decay of a substance?

A

It is random - Cannot be predicted or influenced

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5
Q

What is most background radiation from?

A

Radioactive substances occurring naturally in rocks or in space or man-made resources such as nuclear fallout

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6
Q

Name some sources of background radiation

A

Nuclear fallout, air, medical, ground, food and drink, cosmic

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7
Q

What are isotopes of elements?

A

Atoms with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons

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8
Q

In alpha decay, state what happens to the change in the nucleus, what is the particle emitted and the equation

A

Nucleus loses 2 protons and neutrons
2 protons and neutrons are emitted as an alpha particle
A A-4 + 4 4
Z Z-2 + 2 2

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9
Q

In beta decay, state what happens to the change in the nucleus, what is the particle emitted and the equation

A

A neutron in nucleus changes to a proton, An electron is created and emitted instantly
A A 0
Z Z+1 -1

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10
Q

What is true about alpha radiation (range, what can stop it and what it is made up of)

A

Stopped by paper, 5cm range, each particle has 2 protons and neutrons

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11
Q

What is true about beta radiation (range, what can stop it and what it is made up of)

A

Stopped by aluminium, 1m range, each particle has fast moving electrons

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12
Q

What is true about gamma radiation (range, what can stop it and what it is made up of)

A

Stopped by thick lead, unlimited range, consists of EM radiation

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13
Q

What can you use to separate a beam of alpha, beta or gamma radiation?

A

A magnetic field

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14
Q

State the ionising power of alpha, beta and gamma radiation

A

Alpha most ionising, then beta, then gamma

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15
Q

What does ionising a cell do?

A

Damages or kills it

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16
Q

What is the half life of a radioactive isotope?

A

Average time for the nuclei to halve

17
Q

What does the use of a radioactive isotope depend on?

A

Half life and the type of radiation it emits

18
Q

What range of half life do you need for monitoring?

A

A long one

19
Q

What type of radiation and range of half life would you want for radioactive tracers?

A

Beta or gamma and a half life long enough to monitor but not too long afterwards

20
Q

How can you date a radioactive sample?

A

Need a radioactive isotope which is present in the sample which has a long enough half life about the same as the age of the sample