Atoms and Nuclear Radiation

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19 Terms

1
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Why do unstable nuclei give out radiation

  • Unstable nuclei undergo decay to become more stable

  • As they release radiation their stability increases

2
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What is the name of the process which an unstable nucleus gives out radiation to become more stable?

Radioactive decay

3
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Define the activity of an instable nucleus

Activity is the rate of decay of a source of unstable nuclei

4
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What is the unit of radioactive activity?

Becquerel (Bq)

5
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What is count-rate?

The number of radioactive decays per second for a radioactive source

6
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Give an example of a detector that may be used to measure count-rate

Geiger-Muller Tube

7
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State 4 types of nuclear radiation

alpha particles, beta particles, gamma rays, neutrons

8
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What are the constituents of an alpha particle?

  • two protons and two neutrons

  • it is the same as a helium nucleus

9
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What is the range of an alpha particle through air?

a few centimetres (2-10cm)

10
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What will stop beta radiation from passing through a point?

  • thin sheet of aluminium

  • several metres of air

11
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What will stop gamma radiation from passing through a point?

  • several centimetres of lead

  • a few metres of concrete

12
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What type of radiation is the most ionising?

alpha radiation

13
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What type of radiation is the least ionising?

gamma radiation

14
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State any changes due to the emission of a gamma ray

Both mass and charge remain unchanged

15
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Describe the nature of radioactive decay

  • random

  • which nuclei decays and when is determined only by chance

  • impossible to predict which nuclei will decay and when

16
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Define the half-life of a radioactive isotope

  • the time it takes the activity to halve or half of unstable nuclei to decay

17
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What is radioactive contamination?

the presence of unwanted radioactive nuclei on other materials

18
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What is irradiation?

  • process of exposing a material to nuclear radiation

  • the material does not become radioactive

19
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Why is it important for the results of studies on the effects of radiation to be published and shared with other scientists?

  • to allow findings to be independently checked (peer review)