'Alpha Decay' Searchterm 'Alpha Decay' found in 1 term [ • ] and 1 definition [• ], (+ 5 Boolean[• ] resultsResult Pages : • Alpha Decay
The alpha decay is a corpuscular radiation. Two protons and two neutrons (a helium core) are emitted from
the atomic nucleus. Because of the high biological effectiveness, the use of alpha particle radiation is not allowed in diagnostic nuclear medicine.
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Binding energy is equal to the amount of energy which is used to free electrons or disintegrate nuclides from their atomic bond. The electron binding energy of a hydrogen atom is with 13.6 eV very low. The nuclear binding energy of an alpha-particle, energy equivalent of the sum of the individual masses of nuclides minus the mass of the whole nucleus, is 28.3 MeV. See also Alpha Decay, Beta Decay and Gamma Quantum. Further Reading: Basics:
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(NAA) Neutron activation analysis is a very sensitive analytical technique to determine even very low concentration of chemical elements, trace elements for example, in small biological samples. NAA becomes commercial available in the USA in 1960. In the activation process stable nuclides in the sample, which is placed in a neutron beam (neutron flux, 90-95% are thermal neutron with low energy levels under 0.5 eV), will change to radioactive nuclides through neutron capture (artificial radioactivity). These radioactive nuclides decay by emitting alpha-, beta-particles and gamma-rays with a unique half-life. Qualitative and quantitative analysis of the sample is done with a high-resolution gamma-ray spectrometer. NAA is subdivided into the following techniques:
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Prompt Gamma NAA (PGNAA): gamma rays are measured during neutron activation. For detection of elements with a rapid decay.
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Delayed Gamma NAA (DGNAA): conventional detection after the neutron activation.
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Instrumental NAA (INAA): automated from sample handling to data processing. Analyzes simultaneously more than thirty elements in most samples without chemical processing.
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Radiochemical NAA (RNAA): After neutron activation the sample is chemically refined for better analysis.
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A sample is placed into a concentrated beam of neutrons. Through neutron-capture heavier nuclei become frequently unstable. This artificial radiation decays with a characteristic half-live consisting of alpha- and beta-particles and gamma-rays.
See Neutron Activation Analysis •
Activation is the production of radionuclides (instable atoms) by bombarding atomic nuclei (stable atoms) with radiation (e.g., photons, neutrons, alpha particles). With the activation of an atom its decay starts. See Neutron Activation, Neutron Activation Analysis. Further Reading: News & More:
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