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LOJ Feb 2004 Radioactivity 2 Ionizing Power and Penetrating Power

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Radioactivity 2. Ionizing Power and Penetrating Power. Recap. Alpha a radiation consists of helium nuclei, particles are made up of two protons and two neutrons. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Radioactivity 2

Ionizing Power and Penetrating Power

Page 2: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Recap...

• Alpha radiation consists of helium nuclei, particles are made up of two protons and two neutrons.

• Beta radiation consists of high-energy electrons emitted from the nuclei of atoms. (For each electron emitted, a neutron in the nucleus becomes a proton.)

• Gamma radiation is very short wavelength electromagnetic radiation.

Page 3: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Ionizing Power and Penetrating Power

• These are linked. • The penetrating power of nuclear

radiation depends upon the ionizing power of the radiation.

• The radiation continues to penetrate matter until it has lost all of its energy.

Page 4: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Ionizing Power and Penetrating Power

• The further it can penetrate into the substance the more spread out the ionization it causes will be,

• So….. the more localized the ionization the less penetrating power it will possess.

Page 5: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Alpha Particles

• are the least penetrating as they are

• the most densely ionizing. • They are completely absorbed

by 10 cm of air, 0.01 mm lead or a sheet of paper.

Page 6: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Alpha Particles

• This means that if a given number of alphas are fired at a target they will all cause ionization near the surface of the material, resulting in the effects of the radiation being concentrated in a small volume.

• The double charge and considerable mass of the alpha in comparison with the other nuclear radiation forms explains why the impact on matter is so great.

Page 7: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Beta Particles

• A beta particle can penetrate quite deeply into matter before its energy has been used up.

• Its penetrating power is therefore moderate (absorbed by 1m air, 0.1 mm lead or 3mm aluminium sheet).

Page 8: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Beta Particles

• Betas have only about 1/8000 of the mass of an alpha particle and only half of the charge.

• Therefore their interaction with matter as they passes through is far less severe.

• So the effects of interaction (ionization) are much more spread out.

Page 9: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Gamma Rays

• have an ionizing power so low that they penetrate very deeply into matter before most of the energy has been used up.

• Their penetrating power is therefore very high (about 99.9% is absorbed by 1 km of air or 10 cm lead).

Page 10: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Gamma Rays

• Gamma rays are pure energy - no charge and no mass - therefore their interaction with matter is much less than the other two forms of nuclear radiation.

Page 11: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Absorption of radiation

alpha () radiation - is easily absorbed by a few centimetres of air or a thin sheet of paper;

beta ( radiation - easily passes through air or paper but is mostly absorbed by a few millimetres of metal;

gamma () radiation - is very penetrating and requires many centimetres of lead or metres of concrete to absorb most of it.

Page 12: Radioactivity 2

LOJ Feb 2004

Penetration Power