Nuclear 1 Flashcards

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1
Q

What 3 observations were there from the alpha/Rutherford scattering experiment?

A
  • vast majority of alpha particles go straight through
  • a few alpha particles are deflected less than 90°
  • very few alpha particles deflect more than 90°
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2
Q

What does the fact that the vast majority of alpha particles went straight through the gold leaf tell us about the atom?

A

most of the atom is empty space, the nucleus is very small

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3
Q

What does the the fact a few alpha particles were deflected less than 90° tell us about the atom?

A

the nucleus is positively charged

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4
Q

How did the Rutherford scattering show the nucleus is positively charged?

A

there was a shadow behind the nucleus

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5
Q

What does the fact that very few alpha particles deflect more than 90° tell us about the atom?

A

the nucleus is massive (almost all the atom’s mass)

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6
Q

What is a typical atom diameter?

A

approx 10^-10 m

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7
Q

What is a typical nuclear diameter?

A

approx 10^-14 / 10^-15 m

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8
Q

For the Rutherford scattering, why was it essential for there to be a vacuum in the chamber?

A
  • to prevent the alpha particles being absorbed or scattered

- by air molecules

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9
Q

How can we use alpha particles to calculate/estimate nuclear radii?

A
  • project alpha particle towards the nucleus
  • at the point where the alpha particle is closest to the nucleus, KE = 0
  • if the KE of the particle at the beginning is known, this can be used to calculate r (by equating the loss in KE to the gain in EPE)
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10
Q

How can we use electrons to calculate/estimate nuclear or atomic radii?

A
  • an electron will diffract the maximum amount when its wavelength is approximately equal to the diameter of the nucleus or atom
  • the wavelength of the electron can be changed by changing its energy (changing its velocity)
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11
Q

Why is it that the detector reading doesn’t fall to zero when electrons are diffracted by atoms or nuclei?

A
  • negatively charged electrons are scattered by positively charged nuclei - electrostatic attraction
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12
Q

Why is using electrons considered better for determining nuclear radii, compared to alpha particles?

A
  • alpha particles are hadrons, so are affected by the SNF, may fuse with the nucleus
  • electrons are leptons, so are unaffected by the SNF, so can get close to the nucleus and not fuse
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13
Q

What’s a disadvantage of using alpha particles to determine nuclear radii?

A
  • only gives an upper limit

- as it gets close but doesn’t touch the nucleus

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14
Q

What’s an advantage of using alpha particles to determine nuclear radii?

A

KE of alpha particles is all the same as they are monoenergetic

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15
Q

What does the fact that nuclear volume is proportional to mass number tell us?

A

all nuclei are made of the same material (density is constant)

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16
Q

What radiation is used to diagnose in medicine, and why?

A
  • gamma
  • it is penetrating
  • lower dose for the patient
  • can be detected outside the body
17
Q

What radiation is usually used to treat in medicine, and why?

A
  • alpha
  • more ionising
  • destroys damaged cells
18
Q

Define count rate

A

the number of counts per unit time detected by the GM tube

19
Q

What are the possible units for count rate?

A
  • cpm

- cps

20
Q

Define activity

A

the number of decays per second for a radioactive sample

21
Q

What is the unit for activity?

A

Bq

22
Q

Define background radiation

A

low level radiation that surrounds us from natural and artificial sources

23
Q

Name 3 natural sources that contribute to background radiation

A
  • radon gas
  • cosmic rays
  • food
24
Q

Name 3 artificial sources that contribute to background radiation

A
  • nuclear fallout/leaks
  • air travel
  • medical uses
25
Q

How do you get a corrected count rate from a reading?

A

subtract the background radiation

26
Q

What is the 4 key characteristic of exponential decay?

A
  • the same fractional decrease occurs over the same time interval, anywhere on the curve (constant ratio test)
  • variable power
  • y-intercept and x asymptope
  • dy/dx is proportional to y
27
Q

What two words are used to describe radioactivity, and what do they mean?

A
  • random: don’t know which nuclei will decay next

- spontaneous: don’t know when the next nuclei will decay

28
Q

Define the decay constant

A

the probability of a given nucleus decaying in the next second

29
Q

What is one mole defined as?

A
  • the number of atoms/particles in 12g of Carbon-12

- 6.02 x 10^23 particles/molecules