Title: Hazards of Radiation
1Hazards of Radiation
2Learning Objectives
- Recap properties of a, ß, ? radiation.
- Describe and explain the relative hazards to
humans when exposed to a, ß, ? radiation. - Recap the inverse square law of radiation.
- Describe how this applies to the safe handling of
radioactive sources.
3Quick Recap
- Complete the table (in pencil) that describes the
properties of the three common radiations-
Radiation Particle Range in air Stopped By
4Recap - Answers
Radiation Particle Range in air Stopped By
Alpha Helium nucleus (P) Few mm (P) Paper (P)
Beta High speed electron (P) Few cm (P) Aluminium sheet (P)
Gamma Energetic photon (P) Infinite (P) Several cm lead (P)
5Ionisation
- What is ionisation?
- Which do you think is the most ionising?
6Ionisation
- a - Intense, ionises about 10,000 atoms per alpha
particle. (because strongly ve and large) - ß - Less intense than a, about 100 ionisations
per particle. (because lower charge, but higher
speed) - ? - Weak interaction about 1 ionisation per mm.
7Hazards
- a Once it gets in it is highly damaging to body
tissue. - Luckily cant pass through skin but could be
inhaled or ingested. Considered less damaging
than gamma rays or alpha particles. - ß Lower interaction rate means it is much less
damaging to body tissue than alpha. Used as
medical tracers. - ? - can be a dangerous form of radiation, as they
are very penetrating. Needs intense or prolonged
radiation to cause damage to cells.
8Annoying Question (10 mins)
- Explain the dangers associated with radioactive
sources (8 marks). - Write a mark scheme for this question i.e. assign
1 mark each to 8 short but relevant statements.
9Possible Mark Scheme
- Alpha is intensely ionising.
- Although short range and kept out by skin
- Ingestion of alpha emitters can do immense damage
to the cells. - Beta is less ionising
- But can penetrate the body
- Gamma is highly penetrating
- But causes little ionisation.
- Long term exposure leads to damage to DNA
10Spare Question
- Alpha and beta particles lose about 5 10-18 J
of kinetic energy in each collision they make
with an air molecule. An alpha particle makes
about 105 collisions per cm with air molecules,
while a beta particle makes about 103
collisions. What is the range of an alpha
particle and a beta particle if both start off
with an energy of 4.8 10-13 J?
11Spare Question Answer
- Both particles lose all their energy in 4.8
10-13 J 5 10-18 J (P) 96 000 collisions
(P) - The alpha particle has a range of 96000 105
cm-1 0.96 cm (P) - The beta particle has a range of 96000 1000
cm-1 96 cm. (P)
12Inverse Square Law for ?
When taking a reading of intensity, I, at a
distance x from the source, I0 is the intensity
at the source and k is a constant. Intensity
(number of photons per unit area) decreases by
the square of the distance. So doubling distance
from source means only a quarter of radiation
reaches you so keep them at a distance! -tongs
13Learning Objectives
- Recap properties of a, ß, ? radiation.
- Describe and explain the relative hazards to
humans when exposed to a, ß, ? radiation. - Recap the inverse square law of radiation.
- Describe how this applies to the safe handling of
radioactive sources.