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Created by
Theo Kitching
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Isotopes generally sit above the
N
-Z line, indicating they have more neutrons than protons
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The further
Isotopes
are from this curve, the more
unstable
they are and the more
likely
they are to
decay
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Lighter
Isotopes are generally
beta minus
emitters, while
heavier
Isotopes are
alpha
emitters
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Beta plus
emitters do not exist naturally as they require
proton doping
to produce the right
Isotope
, placing them under the
curve
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Unstable Isotopes move through a
Decay chain
to end up at a
stable Isotope
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An
alpha
or
beta
decay can leave the nucleus at an
excited
energy state, emitting a
gamma
Photon
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Some Isotopes can remain in a
metastable
state after
Decay
, emitting
gamma
radiation at a
later
time
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The
relative mass
of nuclei is based on the
relative atomic mass unit U
, defined as
1/12th
the
mass
of a
carbon 12
atom
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A
helium
nucleus, if split into its
constituent
nucleons, will have a mass of more than
4
U due to the work required to overcome the
strong nuclear force
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Average binding energy per nucleon
follows a
specific pattern on
a
graph against mass
number
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One U of mass converted into energy gives
931.5 Mega electron volts
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Binding energy is the
energy
needed to
separate
a
nucleus
, with
Iron 56
being the most
stable Isotope
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Fusion
and
fision
involve
nuclei
turning into other more
stable
nuclei, releasing
energy
in the process
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Nuclear waste
must be
disposed
of
safely
, often by
cooling
in
ponds
and
vitrifying
in
glass
for
deep underground storage
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Activity
is given by the equation A =
Lambda
*
N
, where
Lambda
is the
Decay
constant and
N
is the number of
undecayed
nuclei
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The activity at a given time compared to
initial
activity can be calculated using the
exponential decay
equation
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Intensity of gamma radiation is
inversely proportional
to distance squared
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Electron defraction
can be used to measure the
diameter
of a nucleus
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Ernest Rutherford discovered the
positive
and
small
nature of the
nucleus
relative to the
atom size
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Plotting a graph of the
log
of the
radius against
the
log
of
mass number
results in a
straight line
with a gradient of
1/3
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Comparing two nuclei to find an
unknown
radius or nucleon number can be done using the
proportionality
of R to
A^3
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