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Explore nuclear binding energy, radioactivity, proton-neutron forces, and decay rules in this lecture. Understand fusion, fission, and decay functions in atomic nuclei. Exam prep included.
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Physics 102: Lecture 27 Nuclear Binding, Radioactivity • Make sure your grade book entries are correct • Honors projects are due Monday April 28! • Choose your final date in Grade Book by 10 PM TODAY! • Review for final: Thursday, May 1, 1-3 PM, 141 Loomis • Please fill out on-line ICES forms • Deadline for all excused absences, 11:45 AM Thursday
Coulomb force proton electron proton neutron Very strong force Binding energy ofdeuteron=or 2.2Mev!That’s around 200,000 times bigger! Strong Nuclear Force Hydrogen atom:Binding energy=13.6eV (of electron to nucleus) Simplest Nucleus: Deuteron=neutron+proton 12
Hydrogen Atom: Bohr radius = Example has radius Nucleus with nucl number A: A Note the TREMENDOUS difference Z Smaller is Bigger! ComparingNuclearandAtomicsizes Nucleus is 104 times smaller and binding energy is 105 times larger! 13
Preflight 27.2 Where does the energy released in the nuclear reactions of the sun come from? • covalent bonds between atoms 18% • binding energy of electrons to the nucleus 38% • (3) binding energy of nucleons 44% 15
Proton: mc2 = 938.3MeV Adding these, get 1877.8MeV Neutron:mc2= 939.5MeV Binding Energy Einstein’s famous equation E = m c2 Example proton: mc2=(1.67x10-27kg)(3x108 m/s)2=1.50x10-10 J Difference is Binding energy,2.2MeV Deuteron: mc2 =1875.6MeV MDeuteron = MProton + MNeutron – |Binding Energy| 17
ACT: Binding Energy • Which system “weighs” more? • Two balls attached by a relaxed spring. • Two balls attached by a stretched spring. • They have the same weight. M1 = Mballs + Mspring M2 = Mballs + Mspring + Espring/c2 M2 – M1 = Espring/c2 ≈ 10-16 Kg 19
Fusion Binding Energy Plot Iron (Fe) is most binding energy/nucleon. Lighter have too few nucleons, heavier have too many. 10 Fission BINDING ENERGY in MeV/nucleon Fission = Breaking large atoms into small Fusion = Combining small atoms into large 21
Preflight 27.3 Which element has the highest binding energy/nucleon? • Neon (Z=10) 36% • Iron (Z=26) 20% • Iodine (Z=53) 44% 22
has 56 nucleons Preflight 27.4 Which of the following is most correct for the total binding energy of an Iron atom (Z=26)? 11% 35% 44% 10% 9 MeV 234 MeV 270 MeV 504 Mev For Fe, B.E./nucleon 9MeV Total B.E 56x9=504 MeV 24
B field into screen Radioactive sources detector a particles: nuclei 3 Types of Radioactivity Easily Stopped b- particles: electrons Stopped by metal g : photons (more energetic than x-rays)penetrate! 26
Example Decay Rules • Nucleon Number is conserved. • Atomic Number (charge) is conserved. • Energy and momentum are conserved. :example recall • 238 = 234 + 4 Nucleon number conserved • 92 = 90 + 2 Charge conserved :example Needed to conserve momentum. g:example 30
decay is the emission of A decreases by 4 Z decreases by 2 (charge decreases!) Preflight 27.6 A nucleus undergoes decay. Which of the following is FALSE? 1. Nucleon number decreases by 4 30% 2. Neutron number decreases by 2 40% 3. Charge on nucleus increases by 2 30% Ex. 32
The nucleus undergoes decay. Which of the following is true? 1. The number of protons in the daughter nucleus increases by one. 2. The number of neutrons in the daughter nucleus increases by one. decay is accompanied by the emission of an electron: creation of a charge -e. In fact, inside the nucleus, and the electron and neutrino “escape.” Preflight 27.7 34
238 = 234 + 4 92 = 90 + 2 214 = 210 + 4 84 = 82 + 2 14 = 14+0 6 <> 7+0 40 = 40+0+0 19 = 20-1+0 ACT: Decay Which of the following decays is NOT allowed? 1 2 3 4 36
No. of nuclei present Decays per second, or “activity” decay constant Preflight 27.8 If the number of radioactive nuclei present is cut in half, how does the activity change? 1 It remains the same 28% 2 It is cut in half 51% 3 It doubles 21% 38
No. of nuclei present Decays per second, or “activity” decay constant ACT: Radioactivity Start with 16 14C atoms. After 6000 years, there are only 8 left. How many will be left after another 6000 years? 1) 0 2) 4 3) 8 Every 6000 years ½ of atoms decay 40
Decay Function time 40
Survival: No. of nuclei present at time t No. we started with at t=0 No. of nuclei present Decays per second, or “activity” decay constant where Half life Then we can write Radioactivity Quantitatively Instead of baseewe can use base2: 42
Example You are radioactive! One in 8.3x1011 carbon atoms is 14C which b- decays with a ½ life of 5730 years. Determine # of decays/gram of Carbon. 45
Carbon Dating We just determined that living organisms should have a decay rate of about 0.23 events/ gram of carbon. The bones of an ice man are found to have a decay rate of 0.23/ 2 events/gram. We can estimate he died about 6000 years ago. Example 47
At 6,000 years: 50% remains At 12,000 years: 25% remains ACT/Preflight 27.9 The half-life for beta-decay of 14C is ~6,000 years. You test a fossil and find that only 25% of its 14C is un-decayed. How old is the fossil? 1. 3,000 years 2. 6,000 years 3. 12,000 years At 0 years: 100% remains 49
Survival: Summary • Nuclear Reactions • Nucleon number conserved • Charge conserved • Energy/Momentum conserved • a particles = nucleii • b- particles = electrons • g particles = high-energy photons • Decays • Half-Life is time for ½ of atoms to decay 50
See you next time! • Read Textbook Sections 26.1 – 26.7 • Take a look at Special Relativity in 14 Easy (Hyper)lessons: http://web.hep.uiuc.edu/home/g-gollin/relativity/