he then created the plum pudding model which consited of spheres of positive charge with negative particles embedded in them
The risks when using radiation :
it can enter living cells and ionise atoms and molecules within them - this can lead to tissue damage
lowerdoses tend to cause minor damage without killing cells, this can cause mutant cells which divide uncontrolably - this is cancer
higherdoses tend to kill cells completely causing radiation sickness (leading to tiredness, vomiting and hair loss ) if alot of cells get killed at once
How are gamma sources used in medical tracers?
certain radiocativeisotopes can be injected into people (or they can just swallow them) and their progress arounf the body can be followed using an external detector
isotopes which are taken into the body like this are usually gamma (never alpha) so that the radiation passes out of the body without causing much ioniastion. they should have a short halflife so the radioactivity inside the patient quicly disapears
Radotherapy:
since highdoses of radiation will kill all living cells it can be used to treat cancers
gamma rays are directed carefully at just the right dosage to kill the cancer cells without damaging too many normal cells, Radiation emmiting implants (usually beta-emmiters ) can be put next to or inside tumors
however a fair bit of damage is done to normal cells which makes the patient feel very ill
What are isotopes ?
an atom with the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons (the atomic number is the same but the mass number changes )
all elements have different isotopes but here are usually only one or 2 different stable ones
unstable isotopes tend to decay into other elements and give out ratiation as they try to become more stable. this is known as radioactive decay
what are the 3 types of ionising radiation ?
alpha
beta
gamma
ionisinf radiation is radiaiton that knocks electrons off of atoms creating positive ions, the ionising power of a radion source is how easily it can do this
alpha radiation
when an alpha particle is emmited from the nucleus
an alpha paricle is 2 protons and 2 neutrons (a helium nucleus)
they do not penetrate very far into materials and are stopped quickly, they can only travel a few cm inn air and are absorbed by a sheet of paper
due to their size they are highly ionising
beta radiation
a beta particle is a fast moving electron released by the nucleus
they have virtually no mass and a charge of -1
moderately ionising
penetrate moderatley far into materials before colliding and have a range in air of a few metres, they are absorbed by a sheet of aluminium
for every beta particle emmited a neutron in the nucleus has turned into a proton
gamma radiation
gamma rays are waves of electromagnetic radiation released by the nucleus
they penetrate far into materials without being stopped and will travel a long distance through the air
they are weakly ionising as they tend to pass through rather than collide with atoms
they can be absorbed by thick layers of lead or metres of concrete
what is half life?
the time taken for the number of radioactive nuclei in an isotope to halve
how can radiation be measured ?
Geiger-Muller tube and counter which records the count rate (the number of radiation counts reaching it per second)
what is nuclear fission ?
a nuclearreaction that is used to release energy from large and unstable atoms by splitting them into smaller atoms
what is nuclear fusion ?
2 light nuclei collide at a high speed and join (fuse) to create a larger heavier nucleus
nuclear fusion :
the heaviernucleus that is created does not have as much mass as the 2 seperate smaller nuclei, some of the mass og the lighter nuclei is converted to energy and released
fusion releases alot of energy (more that fission)
so far scientists havnt found a way of using fusion to generateenergy as fusion reactors are really difficult and expensive to build
rutherfords alpha scattering experiment lead to the plum pudding model being disproved as it showed that atoms are mostly empty space.
the new model developed was called the nuclear model and it consisted of a positivley charged nucleus surrounded by a cloud of negative elctrons
niehlsbohr proved that electrons orbit the nucleus at certain distances (called energy levels)
in 1932james chadwick proved the existence of the neutron
what is backround radiation ?
the lowlevelradiationthatisaroundusallthetime
what does backround radiation come from ?
radioactivity of naturally occuring isotopes which are all around us
radiation from space (cosmic rays)
radiation due to human activity
what is irradiation?
(an object) being exposed to radiation
what is radioactive contamination?
unwantedradioactive particles getting onto or into an object