P2.3 - Nuclear

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AS - Level (P2) Physics Fichas sobre P2.3 - Nuclear, creado por Kelly Jowett el 29/04/2015.
Kelly Jowett
Fichas por Kelly Jowett, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Kelly Jowett
Creado por Kelly Jowett hace más de 9 años
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Resumen del Recurso

Pregunta Respuesta
what is an isotope? an element with different amount of neutrons
what is the stability like of an isotope? unstable
what kind of nuclei produces a radioactive element? an unstable one
what happens when nuclei decay? they give out ionising radiation
what are the three types of ionising radiation? beta, alpha, gamma
what element does alpha radiation cause? helium
what is the size and the speed of movement for an alpha particle? big, heavy and slow moving
what material can block the route of a alpha particle? paper
what does a beta particle cause? a neutron to turn into a proton
what is a beta particle? an electron
what is the size and speed of movement like for a beta particle? middle
what is the charge of a beta particle? -1
what material blocks a beta particle? aluminium
what ionising strength does gamma have? weak
what is gamma? an em wave
what change does gamma radiation do to an element? none - no change to element or charge
what blocks gamma radiation? thick lead
what sort of ionising strength does an alpha particle have? strong
what is the charge of an alpha particle? 2+
when is gamma often released? after beta or alpha the nucleus gets rid of extra energy
what is the nuclear equation for alpha? mass -4 4 0 element -> new element + he + y atomic -2 2 0
what is the nuclear equation for beta? mass same 0 element -> new element + e atomic +1 -1
where is beta radiation used? *thickness control of paper (eg) *medical tracers
where is alpha radiation used? *smoke alarms
where is gamma radiation used? *medical tracers *radiotherapy (killing cancer cells) *sterilising food and medical equipment
what occupations run a high risk of being contaminated by radiation? *radiographers *pilots *miners *nuclear power station workers
how can the risks of contamination of radiation be reduced? *wearing protective clothing *avoiding the radiation as much as possible *having regular health check ups
the damage of radiation contamination to health depends on what things? *dose *type *amount of exposure
what does high doses of radiation increase the risk of? cancer
what is radiation measured in? sieverts or millisieverts (Sv or mSv)
what is half life? the average time for the number of unstable nuclei in a radioactive isotope to halve
can it be predicted when a nucleus will decay? no
what causes a particle to be strongly ionising? the electrons are easily knocked out
what is radioactivity measured in? bequerels (Bq)
where does background radiation come from? naturally occurring unstable isotopes
give examples of where background radiation can come from? the sun- cosmic rays, hospitals, industry, nuclear explosions
why does radiation cause health problems? radiation causes ionisation which leads to cells mutating which divide rapidly and can cause cancer
what form of radiation is more dangerous inside the body? alpha as it cannot get out so does a lot of damage to a small area
what form of radiation does the most damage outside of the body? beta and gamma as they can easily get through skin and organs quickly
what is nuclear fission? splitting up a large atomic nucleus
what elements are often used in nuclear fission? uranium 235 and plutonium 239
how does nuclear fission work in a nuclear power station? splitting up nucleus releases lots of heat energy, heat energy heats up water, produces steam which turns turbines to make the electricity
describe the process of nuclear fission *neutron absorbed into nucleus of uranium *causes uranium to split and that releases heat and 3 neutrons *these then go on to split up more nuclei
what reaction happens in nuclear fission? a chain reaction
how is the chain reaction controlled in nuclear fission? control rods absorb some of the extra neutrons released stopping them splitting up more nuclei and slows down the reactions
why does the chain reaction in nuclear fission need to be controlled? to avoid overheating or explosion
what is nuclear fusion? the joining of two small atomic nuclei
what are the isotopes used in nuclear fusion? 1 2 H and H 1 1
what is the product of nuclear fusion? 3 He 2
why is fusion better than fission? *more energy released *no radioactive waste left behind *lots of hydrogen available
why is nuclear fusion not yet efficient enough? no material on earth can withstand the temperatures needed (around 10 million degrees)
what happened in 1989 with the scientists that claimed they achieved cold fusion? they claimed they performed fusion at room temperatures but the results weren't reproducible
what cant happen in nuclear fusion and how is this avoided? the hydrogen atoms cannot touch the sides by using a magnet
how is low level nuclear waste disposed of? burying in secure landfill sites
how is intermediate level waste disposed of? sealed in concrete blocks and put in steel canisters for storage
how is high level radioactive waste disposed of? sealed in glass and steel, cooled for around 50 years and then moved into more permanent storage. it could then be buried but would have to be a place with no earthquakes
why is a fusion bomb more efficient than a fission bomb? releases more energy
what is the life cycle of a smaller star? *nebula *protostar *main sequence star *red giant *planetary nebula *white dwarf *black dwarf
what happens in the nebula/protostar? *initially dust and gas *gravity makes gas and dust forming the protostar *gravity converts to heat energy and causes fusion of hydrogen to form helium *helium give out lots of heat and light and star is born
what happens in a main sequence star? *massive amounts of hydrogen so lots of fusion so lots of energy *can maintain energy so can last millions or billions of years *fusion pressure provides outwards force balancing out gravity *long lasting stable period *elements as heavy as iron made through fusion
what happens in a red giant? the star swells and turns red as it cools *heavier elements made by fusion of helium *hydrogen starts to run out
what happens in a planetary nebula? *becomes unstable *ejects its outer layer of dust and gas
what happens in a white dwarf? *a hot, solid, dense core is left
what happens in a black dwarf? a cool white dwarf that eventually disappears
what is the life cycle of a big star? *nebula *protostar *main sequence star *super red giant *super nova *neutron star *black hole
what happens with a super red giant? *hydrogen starts to run out *heavier elements made by fusion *star swells turning red
what happens in a supernova? *more fusion to glow brightly again *expand and contract several times *form elements heavier than iron and ejects them to form new planets and stars *explodes in a supernova
what is a neutron star? *exploding supernova throws outer layers of dust and gas into space *leaves a dense core which is the neutron star
when is a black hole formed? if the star is big enough
what is the 'plum pudding' model of the atom suggest? that atoms were spheres of positive charge with electrons stuck on them
what did Rutherford, Marsden and Geiger's alpha particle scattering consist of? firing alpha particles at gold foil
some of the alpha particles passed straight through the gold foil, what did this show? lots of space in an atom
some alpha particles were deflected at small angles what does this show? nucleus has positive charge
some alpha particles were deflected at very large angles what does this suggest about the nucleus? it has a large mass and a large positive charge
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