Made up of two protons and two neutrons, the same as a helium nucleus
Have an overall charge of two plus
Easily stopped by collisions, can only travel a few centimetres in air and are absorbed by a single sheet of paper
Strongly ionizing, can easily knock electrons off atoms they collide with
Beta particles
Just electrons
Emitted when a neutron in the nucleus decays into a proton and an electron
Have a charge of -1 and virtually no mass
Moderately ionizing and penetrate moderately far, stopped by several metres of air or 5mm of aluminium
Gamma rays
Waves of electromagnetic radiation, not particles
Often emitted after alpha or betaradiation to get rid of extra energy
Have no mass or charge, so tend to pass straight through materials
Only weakly ionizing, can penetrate far into materials and require thick lead or concrete to stop
Neutron emission
Occurs when a nucleus contains too many neutrons, making it unstable
Alpha particles are stopped by a single sheet of paper, beta particles by a thin sheet of aluminium, and gamma rays require a thick piece of lead to stop them