Radioactivity I INTRODUCTION Marie Curie Working with her husband, Pierre Curie, French physicist Marie Curie discovered the radioactive elements polonium and radium in 1898.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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Rutherford when he allowed an alpha-emitting substance to decay near an evacuated thin-glass vessel.
The alpha particles were able to penetrate the glass and werethen trapped in the vessel, and within a few days the presence of elemental helium was demonstrated by use of a spectroscope.
Beta particles were subsequentlyshown to be electrons, and gamma rays to consist of electromagnetic radiation of the same nature as X rays but of considerably greater energy.
A The Nuclear Hypothesis
Rutherford ExperimentRutherford studied the structure of the atom by firing a beam of alpha particles at gold atoms.
A few alpha particlesbounced directly back, indicating that they had struck something massive.
Rutherford proposed that most of the mass ofatoms was concentrated in their centers.
This concentration of mass is now known as the nucleus.© Microsoft Corporation.
All Rights Reserved.
At the time of the discovery of radioactivity physicists believed that the atom was the ultimate, indivisible building block of matter.
The recognition of alpha and betaparticles as discrete units of matter and of radioactivity as a process by means of which atoms are transformed into new kinds of atoms possessing new chemicalproperties because of the emission of one or the other of these particles brought with it the realization that atoms themselves must have structure and that they arenot the ultimate, fundamental particles of nature.
In 1911 Rutherford proved the existence of a nucleus within the atom by experiments in which alpha particles werescattered by thin metal foils ( see Atom).
The nuclear hypothesis has since grown into a refined and fully accepted theory of atomic structure, in terms of which the entire phenomenon of radioactivity can be explained.
Briefly, the atom is thought to consist of a dense central nucleus surrounded by a cloud of electrons.
The nucleus,in turn, is composed of protons equal in number to the electrons (in an electrically neutral atom), and neutrons.
An alpha particle, or doubly charged helium ion,consists of two neutrons and two protons, and hence can be emitted only from the nucleus of an atom.
Loss of an alpha particle by a nucleus results in the formation ofa new nucleus, lighter than the original by four mass units (the masses of the neutron and of the proton are about one unit each).
An atom of the uranium isotope ofmass 238, upon emitting an alpha particle, becomes an atom of another element of mass 234.
Each of the two protons that form part of the alpha particle emitted froman atom of uranium-238 possesses a unit of positive electric charge.
The number of positive charges in the nucleus, balanced by the same number of negative electronsin the orbits outside the nucleus, determines the chemical nature of the atom.
Because the charge on the uranium-238 nucleus decreases by two units as a result ofalpha emission, the atomic number of the resultant atom is 2 less than that of the original, which was 92.
The new atom has an atomic number of 90 and hence is anisotope of the element thorium.
See Elements, Chemical; Nuclear Chemistry; Periodic Law.
Thorium-234 emits beta particles, which are electrons.
According to current theory, beta emission is accomplished by the transformation of a neutron into a proton, thusresulting in an increase in nuclear charge (or atomic number) of one unit.
The mass of the electron is negligible, thus the isotope that results from thorium-234 decayhas mass number 234 but atomic number 91 and is, therefore, a protactinium isotope.
B Gamma Radiation
Gamma emission is usually found in association with alpha and beta emission.
Gamma rays possess no charge or mass; thus emission of gamma rays by a nucleus doesnot result in a change in chemical properties of the nucleus but merely in the loss of a certain amount of radiant energy.
The emission of gamma rays is a compensationby the atomic nucleus for the unstable state that follows alpha and beta processes in the nucleus.
The primary alpha or beta particle and its consequent gamma ray areemitted almost simultaneously.
A few cases are known of pure alpha and beta emission, however, that is, alpha and beta processes unaccompanied by gamma rays; anumber of pure gamma-emitting isotopes are also known.
Pure gamma emission occurs when an isotope exists in two different forms, called nuclear isomers, havingidentical atomic numbers and mass numbers, but different in nuclear-energy content.
The emission of gamma rays accompanies the transition of the higher-energyisomer to the lower-energy form.
An example of isomerism is the isotope protactinium-234, which exists in two distinct energy states with the emission of gamma rayssignaling the transition from one to the other.
Alpha, beta, and gamma radiations are all ejected from their parent nuclei at tremendous speeds.
Alpha particles are slowed down and stopped as they pass throughmatter, primarily through interaction with the electrons present in that matter.
Furthermore, most of the alpha particles emitted from the same substance are ejectedat very nearly the same velocity.
Thus nearly all the alpha particles from polonium-210 travel 3.8 cm through air before being completely stopped, and those ofpolonium-212 travel 8.5 cm under the same conditions.
Measurement of distance traveled by alpha particles is used to identify isotopes.
Beta particles are ejected atmuch greater speeds than alpha particles, and thus will penetrate considerably more matter, although the mechanism by means of which they are stopped is essentiallysimilar.
Unlike alpha particles, however, beta particles are emitted at many different speeds, and beta emitters must be distinguished from one another through theexistence of the characteristic maximum and average speeds of their beta particles.
The distribution in the beta-particle energies (speeds) necessitates the hypothesisof the existence of an uncharged, massless particle called the neutrino, and neutrino emission is now thought to accompany all beta decays.
Gamma rays have rangesseveral times greater than those of beta particles and can in some cases pass through several inches of lead.
Alpha and beta particles, when passing through matter,cause the formation of many ions; this ionization is particularly easy to observe when the matter is gaseous.
Gamma rays are not charged, and hence cannot causesuch ionization directly, but when they interact with matter they cause the ejection of electrons from atoms; the atoms minus some of their electrons are therebyionized ( see Radiation Effects, Biological).
Beta rays produce t to z of the ionization generated by alpha rays per centimeter of their path in air.
Gamma rays produce about t of the ionization of beta rays.
The Geiger-Müller counter and other ionization chambers ( see Particle Detectors), which are based on these principles, are used to detect the amounts of individual alpha, beta, and gamma rays, and hence the absolute rates of decay of radioactive substances.
One unit of radioactivity, the curie,is based on the decay rate of radium-226, which is 37 billion disintegrations per second.
The newer and preferred unit for measuring radioactivity in the InternationalSystem of Units is called the becquerel.
It is equal to one disintegration per second.
Modes of radioactive decay, other than the three above mentioned, exist.
Some isotopes are capable of emitting positrons, which are identical with electrons but.
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