Decay modes Flashcards

1
Q

For light isotopes:

A

Z from 0 to 20, the stable nuclei follow the straight line N = Z. Such nuclei have numbers of protons and neutrons.

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2
Q

As Z increases beyond 20:

A
  • Stable nuclei have more neutrons than protons. The neutron/proton ratio increases.
  • The extra neutrons help to bind the nucleons together without introducing the repulsive force as more protons would do.
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3
Q

α emitters occur when:

A

Beyond about Z=60, most emissions occur where Z > 80 and N> 120 and has more neutrons than protons, and are too large to be stable as strong nuclear force cannot overcome the electrostatic force between the protons.

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4
Q

β+ emitters occur:

A
  • To the right of the stability line where the isotopes are proton-rich compared to stable isotopes.
  • A nucleus that emits a β+ loses a proton and gains an neutron.
  • Moving -Z + N.
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5
Q

β- emitters occur:

A
  • To the left of the stability line where the isotopes are neutron-rich compared to stable isotopes.
  • A nucleus that emits a β- loses a neutron and gains an electron.
  • Moving Z + -N.
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6
Q

What happens in gamma emission?

A
  • If the nucleus is formed in an excited state after it emits an α or β particle or undergoes electron capture.
  • The excited state is usually short-lived and the nucleus moves to its lowest energy state, the ground state.
  • Via one or more lower energy excited states.
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7
Q

What is a metastable state?

A

An excited state of the nuclei of an isotope that lasts long enough after α or β emission for the isotope to be separated from the parent isotope

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