Physic Additional Radioactive Stuff Flashcards

1
Q

How was the atomic structure discovered?

A

Rutherford and Marsden fired a beam of alpha particles at thin gold foil, they expected that the positively charged alpha particles would be deflected back by the negatively charged electrons
In fact most of the alpha particles went straight thorough and only a few got deflected back
So they realised
That most of the mass of the atom was concentrated at the centre in what they called a nucleus, and the nucleus had ti have a positive charge since it repelled the positive alpha particles at large angles more over most of the atom was empty space

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2
Q

Describe the plum pudding model

A

The positive charged matter in the atom was spread out

And the electrons were buried inside

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3
Q

What is the mass of a proton?

A

1

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4
Q

What is the mass of a neutron?

A

1

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5
Q

What is the mass of an electron?

A

1/2000

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6
Q

What are isotopes?

A

Different forms of the same element

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7
Q

What do isotopes have?

A

The same number of protons but a different number of neutrons
The same atomic number but different mass numbers
Some are radioactive and decay into other elements giving out radiation

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8
Q

What are the sources of radiation?

A

Space, cosmic rays from the sun
Air, food, building materials, rocks
Man made sources such as nuclear plants, wastes and disaster bombs

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9
Q

Describe the alpha particle

A
Helium nuclei
2 neutrons and 2 protons 
Big heavy slow moving
Don't penetrate far into the material and are stopped quickly
Short range in air 
Strongly ionising, bump into aims and knock electrons of them 
A-4.      4
Z-2       2
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10
Q

Describe beta particles

A
Electrons 
Quite fast and small
Penetrate moderately into materials before colliding 
Long range in air 
Moderately ionising 
For every beta particle emitted a neutron turns into a proton 
A.      0
Z+1.   -1
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11
Q

Describe gamma radiation

A

Short wavelength and electromagnetic waves
Penetrate far into materials without being stopped
Lass straight through air
Weakly ionising as they don’t collide with atoms
No mass or charge

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12
Q

What does the damage depend on

A

Type and amount of radiation you have been exposed to

Higher the radiation risk the more at risk you are at developing cancer

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13
Q

What does the radiation dose depend on

A

Underground rocks can cause higher levels on the surface - miners
Nuclear industry they are exposed to more radiation so they wear special clothing and have film badges
Radiographers in hospitals wear lead aprons and stand behind lead screens
High altitudes, closer to cosmic rays

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14
Q

What happens when alpha and beta particles go through a magnetic field?

A

When travelling through a magnetic field they will both be deflected but in opposite directions because of there opposite charges
Alpha particles have a larger charge than beta particles so they will feel a grater force from a magnet and electric field but they are deflected less because they have a greater mass

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15
Q

What happens to gamma radiation when it goes through a field?

A

It has no charge so it doesn’t get deflected

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16
Q

What is a half life?

A

The average time it takes for the number of nuclei in a isotope to halve

17
Q

What is a short half life?

A

Activity falls quickly because lots of nuclei decay quickly

18
Q

What is a long half life?

A

Activity falls more slowly because the nuclei doesn’t decay for a long time

19
Q

How do smoke detectors work?

A

Alpha cause ionisation and therefore a current flows between the 2 electrodes, if there is a fire the smoke will absorb the radiation and the current will stop so an alarm will sound

20
Q

How do radioactive travers work?

A

Have to be short half life of beta and gamma this is because they are less ionising and pass quickly out of the body and should only last a few hours
It is injected or swallowed and there progress around the body is followed using an external detector this converts reading to a display showing where the strongest reading is coming from

21
Q

What is radiotherapy?

A

High dosages of gamma will kill off all living cells including cancerous cells, if it is directed carefully at just the right dosage it can kill the cancer cells without damaging too many normal cells

22
Q

What does ionisation do?

A

Enter the cells and collide with molecules which causes ionisation this damages and destroys molecules
It can cause mutant cells which divide uncontrollably this is called cancer

23
Q

What is nuclear fussion?

A

The splitting up of atomic nuclei

24
Q

How does nuclear fission work?

A

A slow moving neutron must be absorbed into uranium or plutonium nucleus this makes the nucleus unstable causing it to split
Each time the uranium or plutonium splits it spits out 2 or 3 neutrons, one of these may hit another nucleus causing it also to split this keeps the chain reaction going
This gives out a lot more energy than you get from chemical reactions

25
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of nuclear fission?

A
  • disposal of nuclear waste as the products left over are radioactive so cant just be thrown away, it is difficult and expensive to dispose of safely
  • chernobyl
  • overall cost of running is high due to the cosy of the power plant and final decommissioning
    + nuclear fuel is cheap
26
Q

How does a nuclear power station work?

A

In a nuclear reactor the atomic nuclei split up and release heat energy in a controlled chain reaction
This heat heats water to make steam which drives a steam turbine which makes electricity from a generator
Control rods absorb surplus neutrons to keep the chain of reaction controlled
Made of thick steel to with stand high temperatures and pressures
Water acts as a coolant

27
Q

What is nuclear fusion?

A

The joining of small atomic nuclei

28
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of nuclear fusion?

A

+ releases more energy than fission
+ doesn’t leave behind a lot of waste like fission
- only happens at really high temperatures
- need an extremely strong magnetic field to hold the reaction

29
Q

How doe nuclear fusion work?

A

When 2 protons fuse together they form a heavy hydrogen nucleus
Then 2 more protons collide separately with two heavy hydrogen nuclei and turn them in to a heavier nuclei
The 2 heavier nuclei collide to form the helium nucleus
Energy Released at each stage is carried away as kinetic energy of the product nucleus

30
Q

Describe the life cycle of a star

A

Stars initially form from clouds of dust and gas, the forces of gravity make the gas and clouds come together to form a protostar
Gravitational energy is converted into heat energy and the temperature rises, when it is hot enough the hydrogen nuclei undergo nuclear fusion to form helium nuclei and give out heat and light
Smaller masses of dust and cloud join together and form planted which orbit the star
The star balances the force, the heat created by nuclear fusion pushes outwards and the force of gravity pushing everything inwards this is called the main sequence star eventually the hydrogen runs out and the nuclear fusion of helium makes heavier elements such as iron
Star swells out to a red giant or red super giant
If it is a red super giant = it undergoes more fusion and expands, then it forms elements heavier than iron in a supernova, and it forms plants and stars, then it goes to a neutron star and if its big enough a black hole
If it is a red giant it goes to a white drawf and then cools to a black drawf