Atomic Structure Physics Flashcards
Isotope
An atom of the same element with a different number of neutrons
Nuclear model (alpha scattering experiment)
- Most particles went straight through - mostly empty space, nucleus small compared to whole atom
- Some particles deflected several degrees - nucleus positively charged as positive particles were repelled
- A few particles deflected almost 180 degrees - nucleus contains most of the mass of the atom
Conclusion: the mass of the atom is concentrated at the centre (nucleus) and the nucleus is charged
Plum pudding model
The atom is a ball of positive charge with negative electrons embedded in it
Niels Bohr’s nuclear model
Electrons orbit the nucleus at specific distances - his theoretical calculations agreed with experimental observations
Radioactive decay
A random process in which an unstable atomic nucleus give out radiation as it changes to become more stable
Alpha particle
Two neutrons and two protons, the same as a helium nucleus
Beta particle
A high speed electron ejected from the nucleus as a neutron turns into a proton
Gamma ray
Electromagentic radiation from the nucleus
What are the 4 types of nuclear radiation?
Alpha particle, beta particle, gamma ray, neutron
Alpha radiation - absorber materials, range in air, ionising power
- Thin sheet of paper
- About 5cm
- Most ionising power
Beta radiation - absorber materials, range in air, ionising power
- Aluminium sheet (5mm), lead sheet (2 - 3mm)
- 1m
- Medium ionising power
Gamma radiation - absorber materials, range in air, ionising power
- Thick lead sheet (several cm), concrete (more than 1m)
- Long range - spreads in air without being absorbed
- Least ionising power
Half-life (2)
- The time it takes for the number of nuclei in a sample for halve
- The time it takes for the count rate/activity from a sample containing the isotope to fall to half its initial level
Radioactive contamination
The unwanted presence of materials containing radioactive atoms on other materials
Irradiation
The process of exposing an object to nuclear radiation; the irradiated object does not become radioactive