WEEK 13 (Nuclear Physics) Flashcards

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1
Q

What is atomic number?

A

The number of protons in the nucleus

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2
Q

What is Neutron number?

A

The number of neutrons in the nucleus

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3
Q

What is Mass number?

A

The number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus
(Protons + Neutrons = Atomic number)

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4
Q

What is atomic mass measured in?

A

Atomic mass is measured in atomic mass units and is equal to 1/12 the mass of a Carbon-12 atom

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5
Q

What are the charges of Electrons, Protons and Neutrons?

A

Electrons = Negative
Protons = Positive
Neutron = Neutral

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6
Q

The stability of the nucleus depends on which numbers

A

Z (Atomic) & N (Neutron) Numbers

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7
Q

Describe the Forces within the nucleus

A

Protons mutually repel each other due to Coulomb’s repulsive forces between protons however due to the attractive “nuclear force” between the nucleons, the force keeps the nucleus together.

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8
Q

Describe the Nuclear force

A
  • Very strong
  • Al­lows it to dom­i­nate elec­tro­mag­netic forces like the re­pul­sive Coulomb force in sta­ble nu­clei
  • Very short distance
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9
Q

What are the three types of radioactivity?

A

α – helium nucleus
β – electrons or positrons
γ – high energy photons

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10
Q

What is the history behind Radioactivity?

A
  • In 1896 Henry Becquerel discovered that uranium salt crystals emit an unknown radiation that darkens photographic plate
  • Marie and Pierre Curies discovered Polonium and Radium
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11
Q

What is the “Half-life”?

A

The time it takes to halve the number of radioactive nuclei

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12
Q

Describe Nuclear binding energy

A

Mass of nucleus is less than total mass of its individual protons end neutrons, thus mass energy of nucleus is less than total mass energy of protons and neutrons

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13
Q

Explain why Radiation is dangerous for living organisms

A

Interaction of nuclear radiation with matter leads to ionisation thus why UV and X-RAYS are dangerous for living organisms

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14
Q

What are Isotopes used for in Nuclear medicine?

A

Radiolabelling

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15
Q

What are the properties of Gamma rays?

A
  • Shortest wavelength
  • Highest frequencies emitted by radioactive nuclei
  • Highly penetrating
  • Cause serious damage when absorbed by living tissues
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16
Q

Describe the method of how radioisotopes are used in medicine

A

1) A radioisotope is injected into the bloodstream; the radioisotope is usually a simple soluble dissolved ion
2) A marker radioisotope is attached to a specific ligand to create a radio ligand whose properties bind it to certain types of tissues
3) The ligand and radioisotope is carried and bound to a specific organ of interest in the body where emitted gamma photons are detected by gamma camera

17
Q

What do SPECT and PET scanners have in common?

A

Both of them give time dependent 3D images of location of radioisotopes

18
Q

What is the disadvantage of a PET scanner?

A
  • High initial cost
  • Ongoing operating costs
19
Q

What is High spatial resolution used for in medicine?

A

Clinical oncology for diagnosis of certain diffuse brain diseases and tumours