Physics: Intro to Nuclear Physics Notes
Physics: Intro to Nuclear Physics Notes
- The four forces in the universe: gravity, strong force, weak force, electromagnetism
- Gravity is attraction between objects
- Gravity is only significant for very large objects
Electromagnetism Creates magnetism
- Holds chemical bonds together
- Creates electricity
- Strong & weak Forces act in the nucleus of the atom
The Strong Force
- The glue that binds the nucleus together
- When you release the energy in the nucleus, you get a nuclear bomb and nuclear energy
Fission
- Very large unstable nuclei can fall apart or can be split
- Purpose is to create large amounts of energy
Nuclear Chain Reaction
Neutron is added making the atom unstable
Atom falls apart
Loss of mass and release of energy
- Utilized in WW2 and nuclear power plants
Fusion
- Occurs under high pressure and temperature
- Small nuclei combine to form large nuclei
- Cannot be controlled
- The Sun turns hydrogen into helium
- Heavier elements are made in supernovas and in star collisions
- Huge amounts of energy are released by fusion
- Used in hydrogen bomb (not WW 2 Bomb) and stars
- Albert Einstein determined that a small amount of mass contains a large amount of energy
- Equation: E+mc^2
- The amount of mass lost when the WW2 Bombs dropped on Japan: 0.7 grams
- The amount of mass the Sun converts to energy each second: 5 million tons
- The amount of years till the Sun runs out of fuel (hydrogen): 5 billion years
The Weak Force
- Takes place in the nucleus
- The weak force is Radioactive BETA decay
- A neutron turns into a proton and an electron
Beta decay is responsible for
- Irritating hydrogen in fusion stars
- Plate tectonics
- Carbon 14 dating of organic objects
Carbon Dating
- Cosmic rays cause all living things to be radioactive
- Used to date items up to 60,000 years old
- Amount of atomic bombs tested on Earth: 2,000
Wave Particle Duality
- Light can behave like a wave or a particle
- Light is a transverse wave
- Light does not need a medium
- Light also travels in particles called photons
- Young’s Double Slit Experiment showed that light can behave as both a particle and a wave
- Two waves combine form an interference wave
Spectroscopy
- Elements can be identified by their atomic spectrum
- Each type of light corresponds to a specific energy
- Visible light spectrum in order from least to greatest energy “ROY-G-BIV” Highest energy is violet, lowest energy is red
- Higher orbits have higher energy
- When jumping from a low level to a higher level you add energy
- When falling from a higher level to a lower level you remove energy
- Photons are emitted from the atom when an electron falls in energy
- The color of the photon emitted is related to the amount of energy released
- Spectroscopy: dispersion of light into its available spectrum
- the two types of spectra: continuous, discrete
- In a continuous spectrum, light is composed of a wide unbroken range of colors
- Materials that create a continuous spectrum: stars and galaxies
- A discrete spectrum only has lines at very distinct colors
- Every element and chemical has a different emission spectrum
The Photoelectric Effect
- Einstein won the Nobel Prize in 1921for the photoelectric effect
- The photoelectric effect: the emission of electrons when electromagnetic radiation (light) falls on an object
- Three things that happen during the photoelectric effect:
- A light photon hits an object
- Energy transfers from the photon to the object
- If the energy is great enough an electron will be ejected by the object
- The threshold frequency is the minimum energy required to eject an electron
- If energy is below the threshold frequency, no emission
- If energy is equal to or greater than the threshold frequency, electron emitted
- Only the frequency determines the energy
- The amount of light (intensity) does not matter
- Different substances have different thresholds
- Different light has different energy