Particles and Radiation Flashcards

1
Q

Alpha Decay

A

The process of an unstable nucleus emitting an alpha particle (two protons and two neutrons) to become more stable.

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2
Q

Annihilation

A

The process of a particle and its antiparticle colliding and being converted into energy. The energy is released in two photons to conserve momentum.

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3
Q

Antiparticle

A

All particles have a corresponding antiparticle with the same mass but opposite charge and conservation numbers.

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4
Q

Baryon Number

A

A quantum number that is conserved in all particle interactions. Baryons have a baryon number of +1 and non-baryons have a baryon number of 0.

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5
Q

Baryon

A

A class of hadron, that is made up of three quarks. The proton is the only stable baryon.

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6
Q

Beta-Minus Decay

A

The process of a neutron inside a nucleus turning into a proton, and emitting a beta-minus particle (an electron) and an antineutrino.

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7
Q

Beta-Plus Decay

A

The process of a proton inside a nucleus turning into a neutron, and emitting a beta-plus particle (a positron) and a neutrino.

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8
Q

Electron Diffraction

A

The spreading of electrons as they pass through a gap similar to the magnitude of their de Broglie wavelength. It is evidence of the wave-like properties of particles.

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9
Q

Electron Volt (eV)

A

The work done to accelerate an electron through a potential difference of 1V. 1eV is equal to the charge of an electron (E=qv).

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10
Q

Energy Levels

A

Defined and distinct energies at which electrons can exist in an atom. An electron cannot exist between energy levels.

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11
Q

Excitation

A

The process of an electron taking in exactly the right quantity of energy to move to a higher energy level.

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12
Q

Gauge Boson

A

The exchange particles that transmit the four fundamental interactions between particles.

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13
Q

Ground State

A

The most stable energy level that an electron can exist in.

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14
Q

Hadrons

A

A class of subatomic particle that experiences the strong nuclear interaction.

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15
Q

Ionisation

A

The process of an atom losing an orbital electron and becoming an ion.

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16
Q

Isotope

A

Same number of protons but a different number of neutrons.

17
Q

Isotopic Data

A

Data from isotopes that can be used for a purpose, such as carbon dating.

18
Q

Kaon

A

A type of meson that decays into pions.

19
Q

Lepton Number

A

A quantum number that is conserved in all particle interactions. Both electron lepton numbers and muon lepton numbers must be conserved.

20
Q

Lepton

A

A group of elementary subatomic particles, consisting of electrons, muons, and neutrinos.

21
Q

Meson

A

A class of hadron that is made up of a quark and antiquark pair.

22
Q

Muon

A

A type of lepton that decays into electrons.

23
Q

Neutrino

A

A subatomic particle whose existence was hypothesised to maintain the conservation of energy in beta decay.

24
Q

Nucleon Number (A)

A

The sum of the number of protons and neutrons in a given nucleus.

25
Nucleon
A proton or a neutron.
26
Pair Production
The process of a sufficiently high-energy photon converting into a particle and its corresponding antiparticle. To conserve momentum, this usually occurs near a nucleus.
27
Photon
A packet of energy.
28
Pion
A type of meson and the exchange particle for the strong nuclear force.
29
Positron
A positively charged particle that is the antiparticle of an electron.
30
Proton Number (Z)
The number of protons present in the nucleus of a given element.
31
Stopping Potential
The minimum potential difference required to stop the highest kinetic energy electrons from laving the metal plate in the photoelectric effect.
32
Strange Particles
Particles that are produced through the strong interaction but decay through the weak interaction.
33
Strangeness
A quantum number that is conserved in strong interactions nut not in weak interactions. This reflects that strange particles are always produced in pairs.
34
Strong Nuclear Force
A force that acts between nucleons in a nucleus to keep it stable. It is attractive at distances of up to 3fm and repulsive at separations less than 0.5fm.
35
Threshold Frequency
The minimum frequency of photons required for photoelectrons to be emitted from the surface of a metal plate through the photoelectric effect. It is equal to the metal's work function divided by Planck's constant.
36
Work Function
The minimum energy required to remove an electron from a metal's surface.