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Radioactive decay #1

 
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Introduction

Summary

Contrary to popular opinion, radiation is a natural phenomenon. It was discovered in 1896 by A.H. Becquerel who was studying the fluorescent properties of uranium salts.

We identify 3 distinct types of radioactive decay. Each type of decay liberates a large amount of energy:

  1. Alpha radiation: the emission of a helium atom.
  2. Beta (+ and -) radiation: the emission of either an electron (beta-) or a positron (beta+).
  3. Gamma emission: the liberation of a high-energy photon.

Goals

  • To distinguish the different types of radioactive decay.
  • To specify that nearly all alpha decay or beta decay are accompanied by gamma emissions.
  • To define the becquerel (Bq), a unit of measurement of activity in a radioactive sample (number of decays per second).
  • To show that there are forms of ionizing radiation with very different penetrating properties. Gamma photons have strong penetrating properties which are used in nuclear medicine.

 

Features

Rollover each type of radioactive decay.

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Tags

radioactivity helium ionizing-radiations Curie Becquerel alpha beta gamma-ray nuclear-medicine scintigraphy