True False

24
Discussion question: If a nucleus undergoes radioactive decay it must be older than the other nuclei in the sample that haven’t decayed. A. True B. False

description

Discussion question: If a nucleus undergoes radioactive decay it must be older than the other nuclei in the sample that haven’t decayed. True False. Types of radioactive decay. Gamma Beta (+,-, e.c .) Alpha Neutron emission Fission Fusion http://ie.lbl.gov/education/isotopes.htm. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of True False

Page 1: True False

Discussion question: If a nucleus undergoes radioactive decay it must be older than the other nuclei in the sample that haven’t decayed.A. TrueB. False

Page 2: True False

Types of radioactive decay Gamma Beta (+,-, e.c.) Alpha

Neutron emission Fission Fusion

http://ie.lbl.gov/education/isotopes.htm

Page 3: True False

Gamma DecayNucleus in excited state gives off energy as a photon

𝐶∗6❑

❑14 → 𝐶❑

6❑

❑14 +𝛾

Page 4: True False

Beta Decay – electron and positron decay

Changes a proton to a neutron or a neutron to a proton

189F + e

β- 146C

e.c.

14162Smβ+

Page 5: True False

22688Ra

Alpha Decay--42He given off

Alpha particle is a very lowenergy system / very tightly bound

Page 6: True False

23892U 234

90Th + ? T1/2 = 4.5 Gy

A. alphaB. beta +C. beta –D. e.c.E. gamma

Page 7: True False

23490Th 234

91Pa + ? T1/2 = 24 days

A. alphaB. beta +C. beta –D. e.c.E. gamma

Page 8: True False

Why do some things decay, other don’t?

MagicNumbers

Image from http://pms.iitk.ernet.in/ICT/physics_courses/akj/AKJain_IITR_Ch_2.htm

Page 9: True False

Why do some things decay, other don’t?

MagicNumbers

Image from http://pms.iitk.ernet.in/ICT/physics_courses/akj/AKJain_IITR_Ch_2.htm

Page 10: True False

Small nuclei – N ~ Z

Page 11: True False

Large nuclei – N > Z

Page 12: True False

Radiometric Dating Carbon Dating

– Cosmic rays release neutrons– 14N + n → 14C + 1H

Half life of ~5760 years– Compare carbon-12 to carbon-14 ratio– Limitations

Must be organic Has the ratio of C-12 to C-14 always been

the same?– Calibration

50,000 years limit (not much C-14 left)

Page 13: True False

2 Nephi 2:26And the Messiah cometh in the fulness of time, that he may redeem the children of men from the fall. And because that they are redeemed from the fall they have become free forever, knowing good from evil; to act for themselves and not to be acted upon, save it be by the punishment of the law at the great and last day, according to the commandments which God hath given.

Page 14: True False

More Proof

Page 15: True False

22688Ra eventually becomes 206

82Pb. What is released in this process?

A. only alphasB. only betasC. both but more alphas than betasD. both but the same number of alphas

and betasE. both but more betas than alphas

Page 16: True False

N

Z

U23892

85 9080

145

140

Th23490

Pa23491

U23492Th230

90

Ra22690

Th23290 Np237

93 U23892 U235

92

Page 17: True False

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decay_chain

Page 18: True False

Penetration Depth Alpha– only a few cm through air Beta—only through air—blocked by

paper or sheet of metal Gamma rays—short wavelength light

—penetrate several cm lead or a meter of concrete. Easily penetrates the skin and interacts with human cells—these are the dangerous ones.

Page 19: True False

What has to be true for a particular type of nuclear

decay to happen? Conservation of . . .

– Energy, momentum, angular momentum Compare rest energy OK if we go down in energy – turn into

kinetic– Lepton number, Baryon number, …

Force to make it happen

Page 20: True False
Page 21: True False

For radioactive decay where No

is the number of nuclei you start with and N is the number of nuclei after a time t

toeNN

How do I solve for λ?

Page 22: True False

Discussion question: Over the course of 3 hours, 15% of a radioactive material decays. What is its half-life?A. 4.1 hrsB. 12.8 hrsC. 24.0 hrsD. 68.6 hrsE. 84.2 hrs

Page 23: True False

#decays/sec=λN 1 Ci = 3.7x1010 decays/sec

Page 24: True False

Fission: Heavy Elements can reduceenergy (i.e. increase bindingenergy per nucleon) bysplitting roughly in half.

Dallin S. Durfee
From http://www.physlink.com/Education/AskExperts/Images/ae534.gif