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Published byRosa Cannon Modified over 9 years ago
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P Nuclear reactions Some atoms have an unstable nucleus and need to get to a lower energy state. It can become stable by emitting Alpha, Beta or gamma radiation. It “decays”.
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The structure of the atom
ELECTRON – negative, mass nearly nothing PROTON – positive, same mass as neutron (“1”) NEUTRON – neutral, same mass as proton (“1”)
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The structure of the atom
-1 Electron 1 Neutron Proton Relative Charge Relative Mass Particle MASS NUMBER = number of protons + number of neutrons He 2 4 PROTON NUMBER = number of protons (obviously)
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Each isotope of oxygen has 8 protons
An isotope is an atom with a different number of neutrons: Isotopes The mass number is different. How many neutrons does each isotope have? O 8 16 O 8 17 O 8 18 Each isotope of oxygen has 8 protons
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ISOTOPES OF CARBON C C C 12 13 14 6 6 6
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ISOTOPES OF CARBON C C C 12 13 14 6 6 6 Q1. How many protons does each carbon atom have? Q2. How many electrons does each carbon atom have? Q3 How many neutrons does each carbon atom have?
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ISOTOPES OF CARBON C C C 12 13 14 6 6 6 Q1. How many protons does each carbon atom have? Q2. How many electrons does each carbon atom have? Q3 How many neutrons does each carbon atom have?
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ISOTOPES OF CARBON C C C 12 13 14 6 6 6 Q1. How many protons does each carbon atom have? Q2. How many electrons does each carbon atom have? 6 Q3 How many neutrons does each carbon atom have?
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ISOTOPES OF CARBON C C C 12 13 14 6 6 6 Q1. How many protons does each carbon atom have? Q2. How many electrons does each carbon atom have? 6 Q3 How many neutrons does each carbon atom have? 6, 7, 8
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Radioactivity electrons ?
Isotopes of the same element always have the same number of in their nuclei, but they can have different numbers of electrons ? protons ? neutrons?
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C Carbon isotopes: eg carbon 12 carbon 14 12 14 6 protons & 8 neutrons
proton number C Some isotopes have unstable Without warning the breaks up releasing , or radiation and possibly forms a new element. (nucleus, , , atoms)
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+ Types of radiation decay: P D He
1) Alpha () – a nucleus decays into a new nucleus and emits an alpha particle (2 protons and 2 neutrons – the nucleus of a helium atom) Unstable nucleus New nucleus Alpha particle decay: P D + He
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+ + Types of radiation decay: P D He Th Ra He
1) Alpha () – a nucleus decays into a new nucleus and emits an alpha particle (2 protons and 2 neutrons – the nucleus of a helium atom) Unstable nucleus New nucleus Alpha particle decay: P D + He Eg 1: Th Ra + He
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+ + Types of radiation decay: P D He 224 Th Ra He 88
1) Alpha () – a nucleus decays into a new nucleus and emits an alpha particle (2 protons and 2 neutrons – the nucleus of a helium atom) Unstable nucleus New nucleus Alpha particle decay: P D + He Eg 1: 224 Th Ra + He 88
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+ Types of radiation decay: P D
2) Beta () – a nucleus decays into a new nucleus by changing a neutron into a proton and electron. The fast moving, high energy electron is called a beta particle. Beta particle New nucleus Unstable nucleus decay: P D +
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+ + Types of radiation decay: P D K Ca
2) Beta () – a nucleus decays into a new nucleus by changing a neutron into a proton and electron. The fast moving, high energy electron is called a beta particle. Beta particle New nucleus Unstable nucleus decay: P D + Eg 2: K Ca +
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+ + Types of radiation decay: P D 40 K Ca 20
2) Beta () – a nucleus decays into a new nucleus by changing a neutron into a proton and electron. The fast moving, high energy electron is called a beta particle. Beta particle New nucleus Unstable nucleus decay: P D + Eg 2: 40 K Ca + 20
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Types of radiation 1) Alpha () – a nucleus decays into a new nucleus and emits an alpha particle (2 protons and 2 neutrons – the nucleus of a helium atom) 3) Gamma – after or decay surplus energy is sometimes emitted. This is called gamma radiation and has a very high frequency with short wavelength. The nucleus is not changed. Unstable nucleus New nucleus Alpha particle Unstable nucleus New nucleus Gamma radiation 2) Beta () – a nucleus decays into a new nucleus by changing a neutron into a proton and electron. The fast moving, high energy electron is called a beta particle. Beta particle New nucleus Unstable nucleus
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Background radiation * This is ionising radiation from:
cosmic rays (from outer space) % X ray tubes % radon gas from granite rocks % food and drink % air % nuclear reactors leaking % nuclear weapons testing % Ionisation is the removal of an electron from an atom leaving it as a positively charged ion Experiment to measure Background count rate /min: *
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