Radioactive Decay Flashcards
1
Q
A parent decays to what?
A
a daughter
2
Q
Types of radioactive decay
A
- Alpha Decay
- Beta -
- Beta +
- Electron capture (EC)
- Internal conversion (IC)
3
Q
Explain Alpha Decay
A
- ‘A’ decreases by 4 (2 protons, 2 neutrons);
- ‘Z’ decreases by 2;
- Decays by same energy, every decay;
- Mainly occurs in heavy elements, Z > 82;
- Discrete energy (only 1 energy ranging from 5 - 10 Mev);
- Carries a +2 charge;
- Range of 4cm in air;
- 5000 ion pairs/mm
4
Q
Explain Beta- Decay
A
- Z + 1, N - 1;
- Antineutrino released (electron);
- NEUTRON rich parent;
- PROTON deficient parent;
- Avg is 1/3 of max (9Mev Max has 3Mev avg);
- Daughter is an isobar
- most B- is followed by gamma
5
Q
Explain Beta+ Decay
A
- Z - 1, N + 1;
- neutrino released (positron);
- NEUTRON deficient parent;
- PROTON rich parent;
- Avg is 1/3 x .4
- Daughter is an isobar;
- E > 1.022 MeV Threshold due to annihilation photons, 0.511 MeV x 2 (similar to pair production);
- Lighter elements
6
Q
Explain Electron Capture (EC)
A
- it grabs an electron;
- Z -1, N + 1;
- PROTON rich parent;
- E can be < 1.022 MeV;
- heavier elements;
- followed by characteristic x-rays or auger electrons
7
Q
Explain Internal Conversion (IC)
A
- A, Z, n remain unchanged;
- Transfers E from nucleus to orbital electron (K or L shell);
- Discrete e’ is ejected;
- Probability of occurrence increases with Z;
- results in production of characteristic x-rays or auger electrons