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Chapter 39 The Atomic Nucleus and Radioactivity
Conceptual Physics Hewitt, 1999 Bloom High School
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39.1 The Atomic Nucleus Nucleons- particles in the nucleus of an atom
Neutrons (n0) & Protons (p+) Almost equal masses Neutrons are “glue” in a nucleus Electrical forces- like repels like p+ repel other p+ in the nucleus Acts over a distance Inverse-square law
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Neutrons & Nuclear Strong Forces
Acts between nucleons Only acts in close proximity Neutron- nucleon that is unstable when alone More neutrons are needed for more protons
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39.2 Radioactive Decay Alpha (a) particle- helium nucleus
2p+ with 2n0 ejected from nucleus Positively charged particle Gamma (g) ray- electromagnetic radiation
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Beta emissions b- particle- electron (e-) b+ particle- positron (e+)
With extra n0’s, 1n0 is transformed into 1p+ + 1e- Conservation of charges (-) charged particle b+ particle- positron (e+) With extra p+’s, 1p+ is transformed into 1n0 + 1e+ (+) charged particle
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39.3 Radiation Penetrating Power
g ray- penetrate the most No charge or mass to slow them down Need a very high density substance to block them b particle- penetrates slightly Loses energy with a small number of collisions Thin sheets of metal can block them a particle- penetrates the least Relatively slow and heavy Paper and skin can stop them
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39.4 Radioactive Isotopes Atomic number- equal to the number of p+
Carbon, 12p+ Atomic mass number- equal to the number of nucleons Carbon-24 (99% of all carbon) Hydrogen-1 Deuterium-2 (1n0 & 1p+) stable Tritium- 3 (2n0 & 1p+) radioactive
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Ions vs. Isotopes Ion- charged particle
Gain or loss of an e- through chemical reaction Neutral atom has equal numbers of p+ and e- Isotope- gain or loss of n0 through nuclear reaction Number of p+ must be constant Isotope number is n0 + p+ U-235 is 92p n0
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39.5 Radioactive Half-Life
Half-Life- amount of time for half of the substance to change or decay If half-life is 1000 years, 50% remains at 1000 years At 2000 years, ½ of ½ remains (25%)
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39.6 Natural Transmutation of Elements
Transmutation- changing one element into another Radioactive Decay- can change to another element a-decay- loss of 2p+ Atomic number decreases by 2 Atomic mass decreases by 4 238U 234Th + 4He b-decay- gain of 1p + Atomic number increases by 1 Atomic mass unchanged 234Th 234Pa + 0e- g-decay- no gain or loss of p + No change in atomic number or mass 60Co 60Co + 0g
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39.7 Artificial Transmutation of Elements
Elements can be bombarded to change into other elements 14N + 4He 17O + 1H Transuranic element- elements after Uranium Half-life’s are relatively short, so they are not found in nature
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39.8 Carbon Dating C-12 very stable (99% of carbon is C-12)
C-14 radioactive Found in living tissue and is constantly replaced Ratio of C-12 to C-14 fixed in living tissue In dead tissue, C-14 is not replaced and decreases over time Not found in non-living tissue (metals, rocks, etc.)
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39.9 Uranium Dating Uranium- decays in a predictable pattern
Lead is a decay product, so is found in all uranium samples
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39.10 Radioactive Tracers Radioactive tracer- radioactive isotope used to follow a path Used in agriculture to determine path of fertilizer and water Used in medicine to determine metabolic pathway of medicine or blood
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39.11 Radiation and You Radiation naturally occurs everywhere
Radiation more strong at high altitudes because there is less atmospheric shielding from cosmic radiation
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