4.1-3 Flashcards
Binding Energy of the Nucleus
and the which letter stands for what
- Binding energy of nucleus = mass deficit.
EB = [Z · mp + (A - Z) · mn - mnuc] · c2 - Z: number of protons
- A: number of nucleons
- m_p: mass of proton (≈ 940 MeV)
- m_n: mass of neutron (≈ 940 MeV)
- m_nuc: mass of nucleus.
Binding Energy per Nucleon
f = EB / A
- binding energy of nucleus divided by number of nucleons
example
- f(4He) = 6.6 MeV or 0.007 mp · c2
- f(56Fe) = 8.4 MeV or 0.009 p · c2.
Exothermic Reactions
Exothermic reactions:
- fusion for Z1 + Z2 → Z ≤ Z(Fe)
- fission for Z → Z1 + Z2 ≫ Z(Fe)
- energy is released in these two kinds of nuclear reactions
- fusion of very light nuclei into somewhat heavier nuclei
- fission of very heavy nuclei into intermediate-mass nuclei
Energy Production by Fusion Reaction
Nuclear Potential
- all nuclei are positively charged: repel each other
- only when brought within 10-15m: short-range nuclear forces overcome repulsion → nuclei fuse
-
r < 10-15m:
– Attractive strong nuclear force dominates (stronger than repulsion)
– Minimum: Emin ≈ Estr≈ -8 (A1 + A2) MeV. -
r > 10-15m:
– Electro-static potential between two nuclei Z1 and Z2:
Ees ∝ (1 / (4πε₀)) · (Z1 · Z2 · e2) / r
– Maximum: Emax ≈ Ees(r ≈ 10-15m) ≈ Z1 Z2 MeV.
Problem in Energy Production by Fusion in Stars
- at center of sun (T≈ 107K) typical kinetic energy kBT of particle about 1 keV
- 103 lower than electrostatic potential barrier betwen nuclei → even center of the sun not hot enough for nuclei to overcome repulsion and fuse (classically)
Emax ≫ Ekin in stars
→ particles must tunnel through electrostatic barrier.
Calculation of Reaction Rates R
R = n1 · n2 · <σ(E) · v(E)>
- n1, n2: densities of reacting particles
- σ(E): cross section for reaction.
- v(E): velocity distribution of particles.
- R depends on Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution and average cross section times number of interactions.
Maxwell-Boltzmann “kinetic energy” distribution
- E = mv2/ 2 (m reduced mass)
- Distribution of probability of relative kinetic energy (velocity) of two nuclei to be E:
f(E) dE =[1/√π] · [E1/2/(kBT)3/2] · exp(-E/kBT) dE
→ reaction rate and reaction cross-section
average cross section for fusion
< σ v > = ∫ σ(E) · v · f(E) · dE
Reaction Coefficient and Tunneling Probability
σ(E) ∝ S(E) · e(-b / √E) / E
- S(E) depends on nuclear structure
- b includes reduced mass m and the electro-static potential
b ∝ m1/2 Z1 Z2 e2
Energy Generation by Hydrogen
- nuclear energy generation function:
ε = C · ρ·X1·X2·<σv>
- ε increases with temperature and reactions involving heavier nuclei are much less likely compared to reaction with lighter nuclei at given T
- when calculating energy generation, necessary to add up energies released in all reaction in chain
- for pp-chain the pp2 and pp3 branches are neglected
- experimentally determine the cross-section
p-p chain: εpp = 0.24 · ρ · X2 · (106/T)-2/3 · e(-33.8 · (106/T)1/3) W/kg
CNO cycle: εCNO = 8.7 · 1020 · ρ · X · XCNO · (106/T)-2/3 ·
e(-152.3 · (106/T)1/3) W/kg
List of Important Subatomic Particles
- Proton (p)
- Neutron (n)
- Electron (e-)
- Positron (e+β+)
- Neutrino (ν)
- Anti-neutrino (ν̄)
- Alpha (α)
- Nucleon (_Z^AX).
maybe add table from script
Nuclear Reactions in Stars (3+8)
and conservation laws
Must fulfill conservation laws:
- baryon number
- lepton number
- charge, etc.
Includes
- proton capture
- neutron capture
- electron capture
- fusion of two nuclei
- α-decay
- β-decays
- free neutron decay
- inverse neutron decay.
add table from script with reaction processes!