Title: Nuclear Radiation
1Nuclear Radiation
http//www.alternate-energy-sources.com/nuclear-ra
diation.html
- Amanda, Kartik, Adaobi,
- Ifeoma, and Isabelle
- Period 6
- 11/14/07
2Nuclear Radiation
- Nuclear Radiation is ionizing radiation
originating from the nucleus due to radioactive
decay or nuclear reactions .
Isabelle
3What is ?
Radioactivity
- The spontaneous emission of particles and/or
energy from atomic nuclei. - Radiation is measured in REMs.
Amanda
4Radioactive Elements
- Key radioactive element Radon- produced by
decaying uranium it seeps through cracks of
poorly ventilated buildings - All of the elements after and including
84(Polonium) are radioactive. - Theyre radioactive because of a lack of balance
between the numbers of neutrons and protons. - Some elements are only radioactive sometimes.
- Those elements are Carbon, Potassium, Cadmium,
and Bismuth.
Isabelle and Ifeoma
5Nuclear Radiation and Materials
- Nuclear Radiation can be both extremely
beneficial and extremely dangerous. Nuclear
materials substances that emit nuclear
radiation are fairly common and have found their
way into our normal vocabularies. - Radioactive materials are defined as any material
which has specific activity greater then 0.002
micro curies per gram. This definition does not
specify quantity, only concentration. -
Amanda
6The History of Nuclear Radiation
- It was discovered by Henri Becquerel.
- He was experimenting with uranyl sulfate on
photographic plates when he noticed that uranium
crystals had formed. - About a week later the crystals began to emit
clear and strong images on the photographs,
without sunlight. - This meant that uranium could emit radiation
without an external energy source...thus leading
to the discovery of radioactivity.
Amanda
7Types of Nuclear Radiation
- Ionizing Radiation
- Alpha particles-large and slow
- Beta particles-Fast and produced in nuclear
reactions aka positrons - Gamma-high energy causes radioactive emission
small
Isabelle
8Nuclear Decay
- Alpha Decay
- The emission of the alpha particle from the
nucleus (Helium particle) - Beta Decay
- The emission of the electron from the nucleus
gives off light - Gamma Decay
- emits gamma rays has
- no effect on nucleus, no
- atomic mass, or number
Ifeoma
http//molaire1.club.fr/e-rays.JPG
9Half-Life
- The half-life of an element is the amount of time
it takes for half of the atoms in any given
quantity of a radioactive isotope to decay. - Example Uranium 238 has a half-life of 4.5
billion years. This means that in 4.5 billion
years, half of the atoms of Uranium 238 will have
decayed. In another 4.5 billion years, the half
of remaining atoms will once again split in half. - A practical use of half-life is in modern
medicine.
Ifeoma
10Biological Effects
- High doses of more than 100 Gy affect the central
nervous system, resulting in loss of
coordination, and breathing - Doses from 9 to 10 Gy damage the gastrointestinal
tract, causing nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and
dehydration - Lower doses from 3 to 9 Gy damage the bone
marrow. This leads to loss of appetite and hair,
hemorrhaging, inflammation, and secondary
infections such as pneumonia.
Adaobi Agugo
11Human Effects
- People at Work Fuel cycle Industrial
radiography Radiology departments (medical)
Radiation oncology departments Nuclear power
plants Nuclear medicine departments National
(government) and university research laboratories
-People in the Public (Man-Made) Tobacco
Televisions Medical x-rays
Smoke detectors Lantern mantles
Nuclear medicine Building materials
Adaobi Agugo
12Adaobi Agugo
13Geiger Counter
- The Geiger counter first developed by Hans Geiger
in 1908. - Geiger constructed the earliest form of his
radiation counter in 1908.
Kartik J
14Radiation Smoke Detector
- George Darby first invented the radiation smoke
detector 1902.
In the early days the smoke detector worked when
the heat of the room became overwhelming and
dangerous, the butter would melt, causing the two
circuits to collapse onto one another, initiating
the alarm.
Kartik J
15How to measure Nuclear radiation
- REM - Radiation Equivalent Man
- RAD - Radiation Absorbed Dose (radiation that
deposits energy at 1.00 x 10-2 J per kilogram) - Curie - radioactivity of radioactive material
- 1 Curie 3.7 x 1010 disintegration/sec
- Becquerel - 1 disintegration/second
- Gray - 1 gy 100 rad
- Sievert - 1 sv dose (rad) x quality factor
Isabelle and Ifeoma
16Real Life Nuclear Radiation
- Kosovo, Serbia- caused by left
- over USSR nuclear projects from
- the Cold War.
- Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan-
- caused by atomic bombs
- dropped by the US in 1945 to
- end WWII.
- Australia- caused by nuclear
- tests conducted in the 1950s.
- Cherynobyl, Russia- caused
- by nuclear meltdown.
Chernobyl, Russia
Isabelle
17Interesting Facts
Location of worlds most abundant uranium reserves
- 435 nuclear power plants generate electricity in
30 countries in the world. - 4,000 cases of thyroid cancer were reported by
children who drank milk from cows that consumed
nuclear contaminated grass in Chernobyl. - Radiation can lead to light effects such as
reddening of the skin, or grave effects, such as
cancer or early death. - 80 of radiation comes from nature like soil or
sunlight.
http//www.coolschool.ca/lor/PH11/unit9/U09L04.htm
Isabelle
18Pictures
Kartik J