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Nuclear Masses and Binding Energy. Lesson 3. Nuclear Masses. Nuclear masses and atomic masses. Because B electron (Z)is so small, it is neglected in most situations. Mass Changes in Beta Decay. β- decay. β+ decay. Mass Changes in Beta Decay. EC decay.
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Nuclear Masses and Binding Energy Lesson 3
Nuclear Masses • Nuclear masses and atomic masses Because Belectron(Z)is so small, it is neglected in most situations.
Mass Changes in Beta Decay • β- decay • β+ decay
Mass Changes in Beta Decay • EC decay Conclusion: All calculations can be done with atomic masses
Nomenclature • Sign convention: Q=(massesreactants-massesproducts)c2 Q has the opposite sign as ΔH Q=+ exothermic Q=- endothermic
Nomenclature • Total binding energy, Btot(A,Z) Btot(A,Z)=[Z(M(1H))+(A-Z)M(n)-M(A,Z)]c2 • Binding energy per nucleon Bave(A,Z)= Btot(A,Z)/A • Mass excess (Δ) M(A,Z)-A See appendix of book for mass tables
Nomenclature • Packing fraction (M-A)/A • Separation energy, S Sn=[M(A-1,Z)+M(n)-M(A,Z)]c2 Sp=[M(A-1,Z-1)+M(1H)-M(A,Z)]c2
Semi-empirical mass equation Terms • Volume avA • Surface -asA2/3 • Coulomb -acZ2/A1/3
Asymmetry term To make AZ from Z=N=A/2, need to move q protons qΔ in energy, thus the work involved is q2Δ=(N-Z)2Δ/4. If we add that Δ=1/A, we are done.
Modern version of semi-empirical mass equation (Myers and Swiatecki)
Mass parabolas and Valley of beta stability This is the equation of a parabola, a+bZ+cZ2