Title: Nuclear Physics
1Chapter 29
2Nuclear Physics Sections 14
3Milestones in Nuclear Physics
- 1896 the birth of nuclear physics
- Becquerel discovered radioactivity in uranium
compounds - 1911 Rutherford, Geiger and Marsden performed
scattering experiments - Established the point mass nature of the nucleus
- Nuclear force was a new type of force
- 1919 Rutherford and coworkers first observed
nuclear reactions - Naturally occurring alpha particles bombarded
nitrogen nuclei to produce oxygen
4Some Properties of Nuclei
- All nuclei are composed of protons and neutrons
- Exception is ordinary hydrogen
with just a proton - Atomic number, Z
- Number of protons in the nucleus
- Neutron number, N
- Number of neutrons in the nucleus
- Mass number, A
- Number of nucleons in the nucleus A Z N
- Nucleon is a generic term used to refer to either
a proton or a neutron in the nucleus - The mass number is not the same as the mass
5Symbolism
- Symbol
- X is the chemical symbol of the element
- Example
- Mass number A 27 nucleons
- Atomic number Z 13 protons
- Neutron number N 27 13 14 neutrons
- The Z may be omitted since the element can be
used to determine Z
6More Properties
- The nuclei of all atoms of a particular element
must contain the same number of protons - They may contain varying numbers of neutrons
- Isotopes of an element have the same Z but
differing N and A values - Example
- See Appendix B An Abbreviated Table of Isotopes
Radioactive
Stable
Stable
Radioactive
7Charge and Mass
- The proton has a single positive charge, e
- e 1.60217733 x 10-19 C
- The electron has a single negative charge, e
- The neutron has no charge difficult to detect
- It is convenient to use unified mass units, u, to
express masses - 1 u 1.660559 x 10-27 kg
- Based on definition that mass of one atom of 12C
is exactly 12 u - Mass can also be expressed in MeV/c2
- From E m c2 ? 1 u 931.494 MeV/c2
8Summary of Charges Masses
9The Size of the Nucleus
- First investigated by Rutherford in scattering
experiments - He found an expression for how close an alpha
particle moving toward the nucleus can come
before being turned around by the Coulomb force - The KE of the particle must be completely
converted to PE
10Size of the Nucleus, cont
- d gives an upper limit for the size of the
nucleus - Rutherford determined that
- For gold, he found d 3.2 x 10-14 m
- For silver, he found d 2 x 10-14 m
- Such small lengths are often expressed in
femtometers where 1 fm 10-15 m - Also called a fermi
Active Figure Rutherford Scattering
11Size and Density of Nuclei
- Since the time of Rutherford, many other
experiments have concluded - Most nuclei are approximately spherical
- Average radius is
- ro 1.2 x 10-15 m or 1.2 fm
- The volume of the nucleus (assumed to be
spherical) is directly proportional to the total
number of nucleons - This suggests that all nuclei have nearly the
same density - Nucleons combine to form a nucleus as though they
were tightly packed spheres
12Nuclear Stability
- Very large Coulomb repulsive forces exist between
the charged protons in the nucleus the nucleus
should fly apart - Nuclei are stable because of the presence of
another, short-range force, between nucleons
called the nuclear force - Light nuclei are most stable if N Z
- Heavier nuclei are most stable when N gt Z
- As the number of protons increase, the Coulomb
force increases and more nucleons are needed to
keep the nucleus stable - No nuclei are stable when Z gt 83
13Binding Energy
- The total energy of the bound system (the
nucleus) is less than the combined energy of the
separated nucleons - This difference in energy is called the binding
energy of the nucleus - It can be thought of as the amount of energy you
need to add to the nucleus to break it apart into
separated protons and neutrons
14Binding Energy per Nucleon
- Except for light nuclei, the binding energy is
8 MeV per nucleon - The curve peaks in the vicinity of A 60
- Nuclei with mass numbers greater than or less
than 60 are not as strongly bound as those near
the middle of the periodic table - The curve is slowly varying at A gt 40
15Radioactivity
- Radioactivity is the spontaneous emission of
radiation - Experiments suggested that radioactivity was the
result of the decay, or disintegration, of
unstable nuclei 3 types - Alpha particles
- The particles are 4He nuclei
- Beta particles
- The particles are either electrons or positrons
- A positron is the antiparticle of the electron
- It is similar to the electron except its charge
is e - Gamma rays
- The rays are high energy photons
16The Decay Constant
- The number of particles that decay in a given
time is proportional to the total number of
particles in a radioactive sample - ?N -? N ?t
- ? is called the decay constant and determines
the rate at which the material will decay - The decay rate or activity, R, of a sample is
defined as the number of decays per second -
17Decay Curve
- The half-life is also a useful parameter
- Defined as the time it takes for half of any
given number of radioactive nuclei to decay - The decay curve follows the equation
Active Figure Radioactive Decay
18Decay Units and General Rules
- The unit of activity, R, is the Curie, Ci
- 1 Ci 3.7 x 1010 decays/second
- The SI unit of activity is the Becquerel, Bq
- 1 Bq 1 decay / second
- Therefore, 1 Ci 3.7 x 1010 Bq
- When one element changes into another element,
the process is called spontaneous decay or
transmutation - Conservation of charge, mass-energy, and momentum
must hold in radioactive decay
19Alpha Decay
- When a nucleus emits an alpha particle it loses
two protons and two neutrons - N decreases by 2
- Z decreases by 2
- A decreases by 4
- Symbolically
- X is called the parent nucleus
- Y is called the daughter nucleus
20Alpha Decay Example
- Decay of 226 Ra
- Half life for this decay is 1600 years
- Excess mass is converted into kinetic energy
- Momentum of the two particles is equal and
opposite
Active Figure Alpha Decay of Radium-226
21Beta Decay
- Beta decay a neutron is transformed into a
proton, and an electron and antineutrino are
emitted - A stays the same, Z ? Z1
- Beta decay a proton is transformed into a
neutron, and a positron and neutrino are emitted - A stays the same, Z ? Z1
- Symbolically
- Energy must be conserved
- ? is the symbol for the neutrino (carries away
excess KE) - ? is the symbol for the antineutrino (carries
away excess KE)
22Beta Decay Example
- Radioactive Carbon-14 decay
- Used to date organic samples
23Gamma Decay
- Gamma rays are given off when an excited nucleus
falls to a lower energy state - Similar to the process of electron jumps to
lower energy states and giving off photons - The photons are called gamma rays, very high
energy relative to light - The excited nuclear states result from jumps
made by a proton or neutron - The excited nuclear states may be the result of
violent collision or more likely of an alpha or
beta emission
24Gamma Decay Example
- Example of a decay sequence
- The first decay is a beta decay emission
- The second step is a gamma decay emission
- C indicates the Carbon nucleus is in an excited
state - Gamma emission doesnt change either A or Z
25Medical Applications of Radiation
- Tracing
- Radioactive particles can be used to trace
chemicals participating in various reactions - Example, 131I to test thyroid action
- Sterilization
- Radiation has been used to sterilize medical
equipment - Used to destroy bacteria, worms and insects in
food - Bone, cartilage, and skin used in graphs is often
irradiated before grafting to reduce the chances
of infection
26Medical Applications of Radiation
- CAT scans
- Computed Axial Tomography
- Produces pictures with greater clarity and detail
than traditional x-rays
27Medical Applications of Radiation
- MRI scans
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- When a nucleus having a magnetic moment is placed
in an external magnetic field, its moment
precesses about the magnetic field with a
frequency that is proportional to the field - Transitions between energy states can be detected
electronically to produce cross-sectional images
28Medical Applications of Radiation
- 3D-CRT Treatment
- Three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy
uses sophisticated computers, CT scans and/or MRI
scans to create detailed 3-D representations of a
tumor and surrounding organs - Radiation beams are then shaped exactly to treat
the size and shape of the tumor nearby normal
tissue receives less radiation exposure
29 3D-CRT Treatment Planning