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Cards (51)
Atom
Formed of 3 constituents:
protons
,
neutrons
and electrons
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Nucleus
Formed of protons and
neutrons
, also known as
nucleons
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Electrons
Orbit the
nucleus
in
shells
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Particle properties
Charge
(
C
)
Relative Charge
Mass
(
kg
)
Relative Mass
Specific Charge
(C/
kg
)
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Specific charge
Charge-mass
ratio
of
a particle
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Proton number (Z)
Number of
protons
in an
atom
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Nucleon number (A)
Number of
protons
and
neutrons
in an atom
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Isotopes
Atoms with the same number of
protons
but different numbers of
neutrons
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Carbon-14
Radioactive isotope of
carbon
used in
carbon
dating
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Carbon dating
Calculating the approximate age of an object containing
organic
material by measuring the percentage of carbon-14 remaining
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Strong nuclear force (SNF)
Keeps
nuclei
stable by counteracting the electrostatic force of repulsion between
protons
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Unstable nuclei have too many of either protons,
neutrons
or both, causing the
SNF
to not be enough to keep them stable</b>
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Alpha
decay
1. Proton number decreases by
2
2. Nucleon number decreases by
4
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Beta-minus
decay
1.
Proton
number increases by 1
2.
Nucleon
number stays the same
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Neutrinos were hypothesised to account for the lack of
energy conservation
in
beta-minus
decay, and later observed
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Antiparticle
Has the same
rest energy
and mass but all other properties are
opposite
the particle
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Photon
Packets of
electromagnetic
radiation that transfer energy and have no
mass
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Annihilation
Where a particle and its corresponding
antiparticle
collide, converting their masses into energy released as
2 photons
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PET
scanner
Uses
annihilation
of positrons with electrons to produce
gamma photons
that can be detected to create 3D images of the body
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Pair
production
Where a
photon
is converted into an equal amount of matter and
antimatter
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Fundamental forces
Gravity
Electromagnetic
Weak
nuclear
Strong
nuclear
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Exchange particles
Carry energy and momentum between particles experiencing a
force
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Exchange particles for each force
Gluon
(strong)
W boson
(weak)
Virtual
photon
(electromagnetic)
Graviton
(gravity)
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Electron
capture
p
+ e- →
n
+ νe
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Electron-proton
collision
p
+ e- →
n
+ νe
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Beta-plus
decay
p
→
n
+ e+ + νe
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Beta-minus decay
n
→ p + e- + νe
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Hadrons
Particles that experience the strong
nuclear
force, formed of
quarks
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Leptons
Fundamental
particles that do not experience the strong
nuclear
force
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Types of hadrons
Baryons
(3 quarks)
Antibaryons
(3 antiquarks)
Mesons
(quark-antiquark)
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Baryon number
Shows whether a particle is a
baryon
(1), antibaryon (-1), or not a
baryon
(0)
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The
proton
is the only stable baryon, so all baryons will eventually decay into a
proton
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Lepton number
Shows whether a particle is a
lepton
(1),
antilepton
(-1), or not a lepton (0)
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Muon
A "
heavy electron
" that
decays
into an
electron
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Strange particles
Produced by the strong
nuclear
interaction but decay by the weak interaction, such as
kaons
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Strangeness
A property of particles that must be
conserved
in strong
interactions
but can change in weak interactions
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Scientific investigations in particle physics rely on international collaboration due to the
high cost
and data output of particle
accelerators
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Types of quarks and antiquarks
Up (u)
Down
(d)
Strange
(s)
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Quark combinations for mesons
π⁰ (uu or dd)
π⁺ (ud)
π⁻ (
du
)
k⁰ (
sd
)
k⁺ (
su
)
k⁻ (
su
)
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Neutron
decay
n
→
p
+ e- +
νe
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