Particles & Quantum

Cards (97)

  • What are the three constituents of an atom?
    Protons, neutrons, and electrons
  • What is the nucleus of an atom formed of?
    Protons and neutrons
  • What are nucleons?
    Protons and neutrons
  • How do electrons orbit the nucleus?
    In shells
  • What properties of particles can be described in SI and relative units?
    • Charge (C)
    • Relative Charge
    • Mass (kg)
    • Relative Mass
    • Specific Charge (Ckg<sup>-1</sup>)
  • What is the charge of a proton in coulombs?
    +1.6 × 10<sup>−19</sup> C
  • What is the mass of a proton in kilograms?
    1.67 × 10<sup>−27</sup> kg
  • What is the specific charge of a proton?
    9.58 × 10<sup>7</sup> Ckg<sup>−1</sup>
  • What is the charge of a neutron?
    0
  • What is the mass of a neutron in kilograms?
    1.67 × 10<sup>−27</sup> kg
  • What is the charge of an electron?
    −1.6 × 10<sup>−19</sup> C
  • What is the mass of an electron in kilograms?
    9.11 × 10<sup>−31</sup> kg
  • How is specific charge calculated?
    Charge divided by mass
  • What does the proton number (Z) represent?
    Number of protons in an atom
  • What does the nucleon number (A) represent?
    Number of protons and neutrons
  • What are isotopes?
    Atoms with the same protons, different neutrons
  • What is carbon-14 used for?
    Carbon dating of organic materials
  • What is the strong nuclear force (SNF)?
    Force that stabilizes the nucleus
  • What does the strong nuclear force counteract?
    Electrostatic force of repulsion
  • What is the range of the strong nuclear force?
    Short range, attractive up to 3 fm
  • What happens to unstable nuclei?
    They decay to become stable
  • What causes alpha decay?
    Too many protons and neutrons
  • What occurs during alpha decay?
    • Proton number decreases by 2
    • Nucleon number decreases by 4
  • What causes beta-minus decay?
    Neutron-rich nuclei
  • What occurs during beta-minus decay?
    • Proton number increases by 1
    • Nucleon number stays the same
  • What was hypothesized to account for energy conservation in beta decay?
    Neutrinos
  • What is an antiparticle?
    Particle with opposite properties
  • What is the antiparticle of an electron?
    Positron
  • What are photons?
    Packets of electromagnetic radiation
  • How is the energy of photons related to frequency?
    Directly proportional
  • What is the equation for photon energy?
    E = hf
  • What is the Planck constant?
    6 × 10<sup>−34</sup> Js
  • What happens during annihilation?
    Particle and antiparticle collide
  • What is produced during annihilation?
    Two photons moving in opposite directions
  • How is annihilation used in medical imaging?
    In PET scanners for 3D imaging
  • What is pair production?
    Photon converted into matter and antimatter
  • What is required for pair production to occur?
    Photon energy greater than rest energy
  • What are the four fundamental forces?
    • Gravity
    • Electromagnetic
    • Weak nuclear
    • Strong nuclear
  • What causes forces between particles?
    Exchange particles
  • What are the exchange particles for each fundamental force?
    • Strong: Gluon
    • Weak: W boson
    • Electromagnetic: Virtual photon
    • Gravity: Graviton (not specified)