History of nuclear physics
The closer things are to one another…
…the greater the force of repulsion
When is all kinetic energy transferred to electric potential energy
Graph for when electrons are attractive/ repulsive
Draw the diagram and graph showing electron diffraction
Half life def
The time taken for the number of unstable nuclei to fall to half its original value
What type of nuclear substance is good for inserting into the body and why
Technetium 99:
What factors must be considered when choosing a nuclear substance to inject into someone
Draw an energy level diagram for molybdenum to technetium to rubidium
Half life def
The time taken for the number of unstable nuclei to fall to half its original value
What is one atomic mass unit (1u) equal to
1/12 of the mass of a neutral carbon atom
What is the mass defect/ binding energy
the difference between the mass of a nucleon in theory and the actual mass measured
What is the highest binding energy per nucleon (from the binding energy curve) possible and for what element is this from
8.8 MeV - from Iron 56
What is the most stable element and why
Iron 56 - this element requires the largest amount of energy to separate the nucleons in the nucleus (highest binding energy per nucleon)
Draw and label a diagram of the binding energy table
what is the difference between stable and unstable nuclei
what does it mean and what is the issue with a nucleus being too heavy
what happens to the mass number and atomic number in alpha decay
The mass number decreases by 4
The atomic number decreases by 2
Describe alpha or beta decay and draw a diagram of alpha decay
what happens to the mass number and atomic number in beta decay
what happens to the mass number and atomic number in gamma decay
Gamma decay does not affect the mass number or the atomic number of the radioactive nucleus, but it does reduce the energy of the nucleus
mass defect def
The difference between an atom’s mass and the sum of the masses of its protons and neutrons
what does the mass defect imply about the difference in mass between separated nucleons and a system of bound nucleons
A system of separated nucleons has a greater mass than a system of bound nucleons
binding energy def
The amount of energy required to separate a nucleus into its constituent protons and neutrons