Title: Unit 9, Chapter 30
1Unit 9, Chapter 30
CPO Science Foundations of Physics
2Unit 9 The Atom
Chapter 30 Nuclear Reactions and Radiation
- 30.1 Radioactivity
- 30.2 Radiation
- 30.3 Nuclear Reactions and Energy
3Chapter 30 Objectives
- Describe the cause and types of radioactivity.
- Explain why radioactivity occurs in terms of
energy. - Use the concept of half-life to predict the decay
of a radioactive isotope. - Write the equation for a simple nuclear reaction.
- Describe the processes of fission and fusion.
- Describe the difference between ionizing and
nonionizing radiation. - Use the graph of energy versus atomic number to
determine whether a nuclear reaction uses or
releases energy.
4Chapter 30 Vocabulary Terms
- radioactive
- alpha decay
- beta decay
- gamma decay
- radiation
- isotope
- radioactive decay
- energy barrier intensity
- inverse square law
- shielding
- fission reaction
- CAT scan
- ionizing
- nonionizing
- ultraviolet
- fusion reaction
- Geiger counter
- rem
- nuclear waste
- neutron
- antimatter
- x-ray
- neutrino
- background radiation
- dose
- fallout
- detector
- half-life
530.1 Radioactivity
- Key Question
- How do we model radioactivity?
Students read Section 30.1 AFTER Investigation
30.1
630.1 Radioactivity
- The word radioactivity was first used by Marie
Curie in 1898. - She used the word radioactivity to describe the
property of certain substances to give off
invisible radiations that could be detected by
films.
730.1 Radioactivity
- Scientists quickly learned that there were three
different kinds of radiation given off by
radioactive materials. - Alpha rays
- Beta rays
- Gamma rays
- The scientists called them rays because the
radiation carried energy and moved in straight
lines, like light rays.
830.1 Radioactivity
- We now know that radioactivity comes from the
nucleus of the atom. - If the nucleus has too many neutrons, or is
unstable for any other reason, the atom undergoes
radioactive decay. - The word decay means to "break down."
930.1 Radioactivity
- In alpha decay, the nucleus ejects two protons
and two neutrons. - Beta decay occurs when a neutron in the nucleus
splits into a proton and an electron. - Gamma decay is not truly a decay reaction in the
sense that the nucleus becomes something
different.
1030.1 Radioactivity
- Radioactive decay gives off energy.
- The energy comes from the conversion of mass into
energy. - Because the speed of light (c) is such a large
number, a tiny bit of mass generates a huge
amount of energy. - Radioactivity occurs because everything in nature
tends to move toward lower energy.
1130.1 Radioactivity
- If you started with one kilogram of C-14 it would
decay into 0.999988 kg of N-14. - The difference of 0.012 grams is converted
directly into energy via Einsteins formula E
mc2.
1230.1 Radioactivity
- Systems move from higher energy to lower energy
over time. - A ball rolls downhill to the lowest point or a
hot cup of coffee cools down. - A radioactive nucleus decays because the neutrons
and protons have lower overall energy in the
final nucleus than they had in the original
nucleus.
1330.1 Radioactivity
- The radioactive decay of C-14 does not happen
immediately because it takes a small input of
energy to start the transformation from C-14 to
N-14. - The energy needed to start the reaction is called
an energy barrier. - The lower the energy barrier, the more likely the
atom is to decay quickly.
1430.1 Radioactivity
- Radioactive decay depends on chance.
- It is possible to predict the average behavior of
lots of atoms, but impossible to predict when any
one atom will decay. - One very useful prediction we can make is the
half-life. - The half-life is the time it takes for one half
of the atoms in any sample to decay.
1530.1 Half-life
- The half-life of carbon-14 is about 5,700 years.
- If you start out with 200 grams of C-14, 5,700
years later only 100 grams will still be C-14. - The rest will have decayed to nitrogen-14.
1630.1 Half-life
- Most radioactive materials decay in a series of
reactions. - Radon gas comes from the decay of uranium in the
soil. - Uranium (U-238) decays to radon-222 (Ra-222).
1730.1 Applications of radioactivity
- Many satellites use radioactive decay from
isotopes with long half-lives for power because
energy can be produced for a long time without
refueling. - Isotopes with a short half-life give off lots of
energy in a short time and are useful in medical
imaging, but can be extremely dangerous. - The isotope carbon-14 is used by archeologists to
determine age.
1830.1 Carbon dating
- Living things contain a large amount of carbon.
- When a living organism dies it stops exchanging
carbon with the environment. - As the fixed amount of carbon-14 decays, the
ratio of C-14 to C-12 slowly gets smaller with
age.
19(No Transcript)
2030.1 Calculating with isotopes
- A sample of 1,000 grams of the isotope C-14 is
created. - The half-life of C-14 is 5,700 years.
- How much C-14 remains after 28,500 years?
2130.2 Radiation
- Key Question
- What are some types and sources of radiation?
Students read Section 30.2 AFTER Investigation
30.2
2230.2 Radiation
- The word radiation means the flow of energy
through space. - There are many forms of radiation.
- Light, radio waves, microwaves, and x-rays are
forms of electromagnetic radiation. - Many people mistakenly think of radiation as only
associated with nuclear reactions.
2330.2 Radiation
- The intensity of radiation measures how much
power flows per unit of area. - When radiation comes from a single point, the
intensity decreases inversely as the square of
the distance. - This is called the inverse square law and it
applies to all forms of radiation.
2430.1 Intensity
Power (watt)
I P A
Intensity (W/m2)
Area (m2)
Intensity 7.96 W/m2
Intensity 1.99 W/m2
2530.2 Harmful radiation
- Radiation becomes harmful when it has enough
energy to remove electrons from atoms. - The process of removing an electron from an atom
is called ionization. - Visible light is an example of nonionizing
radiation. - UV light is an example of ionizing radiation.
2630.2 Harmful radiation
- Ionizing radiation absorbed by people is measured
in a unit called the rem. - The total amount of radiation received by a
person is called a dose, just like a dose of
medicine. - It is wise to limit your exposure to ionizing
radiation whenever possible. - Use shielding materials, such as lead, and do
your work efficiently and quickly. - Distance also reduces exposure.
2730.2 Sources of radiation
- Ionizing radiation is a natural part of our
environment. - There are two chief sources of radiation you will
probably be exposed to - background radiation.
- radiation from medical procedures such as x-rays.
- Background radiation results in an average dose
of 0.3 rem per year for someone living in the
United States.
2830.2 Background radiation
- Background radiation levels can vary widely from
place to place. - Cosmic rays are high energy particles that come
from outside our solar system. - Radioactive material from nuclear weapons is
called fallout. - Radioactive radon gas is present in basements and
the atmosphere.
2930.2 X-ray machines
- X-rays are photons, like visible light photons
only with much more energy. - Diagnostic x-rays are used to produce images of
bones and teeth on x-ray film. - Xray film turns black when exposed to x-rays.
3030.2 X-ray machines
- Therapeutic x-rays are used to destroy diseased
tissue, such as cancer cells. - Low levels of x-rays do not destroy cells, but
high levels do. - The beams are made to overlap at the place where
the doctor wants to destroy diseased cells.
3130.2 CAT scan
- The advent of powerful computers has made it
possible to produce three-dimensional images of
bones and other structures within the body. - To produce a CAT scan, computerized axial
tomography, a computer controls an x-ray machine
as it takes pictures of the body from different
angles.
3230.2 CAT scan
- People who work with radiation use radiation
detectors to tell when radiation is present and
to measure its intensity. - The Geiger counter is a type of radiation
detector invented to measure x-rays and other
ionizing radiation, since they are invisible to
the naked eye.
3330.3 Nuclear Reactions and Energy
- Key Question
- How do we describe nuclear reactions?
Students read Section 30.3 AFTER Investigation
30.3
3430.3 Nuclear Reactions and Energy
- A nuclear reaction is any process that changes
the nucleus of an atom. - Radioactive decay is one form of nuclear reaction.
3530.3 Nuclear Reactions and Energy
- If you could take apart a nucleus and separate
all of its protons and neutrons, the separated
protons and neutrons would have more mass than
the nucleus did. - The mass of a nucleus is reduced by the energy
that is released when the nucleus comes together. - Nuclear reactions can convert mass into energy.
3630.3 Nuclear Reactions and Energy
- When separate protons and neutrons come together
in a nucleus, energy is released. - The more energy that is released, the lower the
energy of the final nucleus. - The energy of the nucleus depends on the mass and
atomic number.
37(No Transcript)
3830.3 Fusion reactions
- A fusion reaction is a nuclear reaction that
combines, or fuses, two smaller nuclei into a
larger nucleus. - It is difficult to make fusion reactions occur
because positively charged nuclei repel each
other.
3930.3 Fusion reactions
- A fusion reaction is a nuclear reaction that
combines, or fuses, two smaller nuclei into a
larger nucleus.
4030.3 Fission reactions
- A fission reaction splits up a large nucleus into
smaller pieces. - A fission reaction typically happens when a
neutron hits a nucleus with enough energy to make
the nucleus unstable.
4130.3 Fission reactions
- The average energy of the nucleus for a
combination of molybdenum-99 (Mo-99) and tin-135
(Sn-135) is 25 TJ/kg. - The fission of a kilogram of uranium into Mo-99
and Sn-135 releases the difference in energies,
or 98 trillion joules.
4230.3 Rules for nuclear reactions
- Nuclear reactions obey conservation laws.
- Energy stored as mass must be included in order
to apply the law of conservation of energy to a
nuclear reaction. - Nuclear reactions must conserve electric charge.
- The total baryon number before and after the
reaction must be the same. - The total lepton number must stay the same before
and after the reaction.
4330.3 Conservation Laws
- There are conservation laws that apply to the
type of particles before and after a nuclear
reaction. - Protons and neutrons belong to a family of
particles called baryons. - Electrons come from a family of particles called
leptons.
4430.3 Calculating nuclear reactions
- The nuclear reaction above is proposed for
combining two atoms of silver to make an atom of
gold. - This reaction cannot actually happen because it
breaks the rules for nuclear reactions. - List two rules that are broken by the reaction.
4530.3 Antimatter, neutrinos and others particles
- The matter you meet in the world ordinarily
contains protons, neutrons, and electrons. - Cosmic rays contain particles called muons and
pions. - Thousands of particles called neutrinos from the
sun pass through you every second and you cannot
feel them.
4630.3 Antimatter, neutrinos and others particles
- Every particle of matter has an antimatter twin.
- Antimatter is the same as regular matter except
properties like electric charge are reversed. - An antiproton is just like a normal proton except
it has a negative charge. - An antielectron (also called a positron) is like
an ordinary electron except that it has positive
charge.
4730.3 Neutrinos
- When beta decay was first discovered, physicists
were greatly disturbed to find that the energy of
the resulting proton and electron was less than
the energy of the disintegrating neutron. - The famous Austrian physicist Wolfgang Pauli
proposed that there must be a very light,
previously undetected neutral particle that was
carrying away the missing energy. - We now know the missing particle is a type of
neutrino.
4830.3 Neutrinos
- Despite the difficulty of detection, several
carefully constructed neutrino experiments have
detected neutrinos coming from nuclear reactions
in the sun.
49Application Nuclear Power