What must electrons absorb to move around/leave the atom? | EM radiation (Electromagnetic) |
What do electrons do once [_] is absorbed? | They move to a higher energy level further from the nucleus |
What happens if electrons release [_] instead of absorbing it? | They move to a lower energy level closer to the nucleus |
What ion is created if electrons leave the atom? | A positively charged ion |
What are alpha particles? | Helium nuclei |
Symbol for an alpha particle? | Symbol: |
How far can alpha particles travel in air? | A few cm |
What are alpha particles absorbed by? | A piece of paper |
Ionisation in alpha particles? | Strongly ionising |
Example of where alpha particles are used | In smoke alarms |
What are beta particles? | High- Speed Electrons released from the nucleus |
Symbol for a beta particle? | Symbol: |
How far can beta particles travel in air? | A few metres |
Ionisation in beta particles? | Moderately ionising |
What are beta particles absorbed by? | A sheet of aluminium |
What happens for every beta particle emmitted? | A neutron in the the nucleus has turned into a proton |
Example of where beta particles are used | Beta emitters that test the thickness of sheets of metal |
What are gamma rays? | Waves of electromagnetic radiation released by the nucleus |
Symbol for a gamma ray? | Symbol: |
How far can gamma particles travel in air? | Long distances |
What are gamma particles absorbed by? | Thick sheets of lead or concrete |
Ionisation in gamma particles | Weakly ionising- don't usually collide with atoms |
What has to balance? | Atomic numbers and masses |
Atomic decay equation? | Atom before decay = atom after decay + radiation emitted |
What happens to the atomic number and mass of an atom that endures alpha decay/ emits an alpha particle? | Atomic number reduces by 2, mass reduces by 4 |
What happens to the atomic number and mass of an atom that endures beta decay/ emits a beta particle? | Atomic number increases by 1 (neutron has been turned into a proton), mass doesn't change (electron lost but proton gained) |
What happens to the atomic number and mass of an atom that endures gamma decay/ emits a gamma particle? | There is no change. Energy is released from the atom. |
What is radiation measured by? | Geiger-Muller tube and counter |
What does the [_] record? | Number of radiation counts reaching it per second |
What is half-life? | The amount of time it taken for the number of radioactive nuclei in an isotope to halve |
What is Activity? | The rate of radioactive decay |
What is the unit for Activity? | Bq |
What does a short half-life mean? | The Activity will fall quickly because the nuclei in the isotope are very unstable and decay rapidly |
What is irradiation? | Exposure to radiation |
What is contamination? | Radioactive atoms getting onto or into an object |
Which types of radiation are the most dangerous outside the body? Why? | Beta and gamma- can penetrate skin |
Which type of radiation is the most dangerous inside the body? Why? | Alpha- damages in localised areas |
Why are high doses of radiation dangerous? | Can ionise atoms and molecules in living cells, killing them leading to radiation sickness |