What are quarks?
What is strangeness?
What are baryons made from?
What are mesons?
What does the weak interaction do to the quark type?
What four properties are conserved in particle interactions? Describe them
What are atoms made up of?
What are the relative charges of protons, neutrons and electrons?
Proton: +1
Neutron: 0
Electron: -1
What are the relative masses of protons, neutrons and electrons?
Proton: 1
Neutron: 1
Electron: 0.0005
What is the proton number?
What is the nucleon number?
What are isotopes?
-Isotopes have the same proton number, but different nucleon numbers
1. Atoms with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons are called isotopes
2. Changing the number of neutrons doesn’t change the chemical properties
3. The number of neutrons affects the stability of the nucleus though
4. Unstable nuclei may be radioactive and decay over time into different nuclei that are more stable
E.G. Hydrogen has three natural isotopes: hydrogen, deuterium and tritium:
-Hydrogen has 1 proton and 0 neutrons
-Deuterium has 1 proton and 1 neutron
-Tritium: has 1 proton and 2 neutrons
How can radioactive isotopes be used to tell you how old stuff is?
What is the specific charge of a particle equal to?
What are photons?
How can you create matter and antimatter?
What happens when energy is converted into mass?
What is each particle-antiparticle pair produced from?
What is the minimum energy for a photon to undergo pair production?
What is the opposite of pair production?
What are forces caused by?
What are these exchange particles called?
What are the four fundamental forces? What are their gauge bosons and particles affected?
What happens the larger the mass of the gauge bosons?