'Beta Decay' Searchterm 'Beta Decay' found in 1 term [ • ] and 6 definitions [• ], (+ 6 Boolean[• ] resultsResult Pages : • Beta Decay
There are two kinds of beta decay: beta minus and beta plus decay. The differentiation depends on the charge of the emitted particle. At the beta plus decay in the nucleus a proton changes to a neutron and emits a positron and a neutrino. The atom is after the decay a different element, but with the same number of particles in the nucleus. At the beta minus decay in the nucleus a neutron changes to a proton and emits an electron and an antineutrino. As with the beta plus decay the atom changes to a different element but with the same number of particles in the nucleus. Sometimes the electron capture is mentioned as a third kind of beta decay. Beta decay is used for example in positron-electron tomography or in iodine-131 therapy. See also Electron Capture. •
Henri Becquerel demonstrated beta particles in 1900. Identical with electrons is there negative charge at -1. Their mass is 549 millionths of one AMU, 1/2000 of the mass of a proton or neutron.
Beta particles consist of high energetic electrons emitted by radioactive nuclei or neutrons. By the process of beta decay, one of the neutrons in the nucleus is transformed into a proton and a new atom is formed which has one less neutron but one more proton in the core. Beta decay is accompanied by the emission of a positron (the antiparticle of the electron), a positive charged antineutrino. Beta particles have a greater range of penetration than alpha particles but less than gamma rays or x-rays. The name beta was coined by Rutherford in 1897.
The traveling speed of beta particles depends on their energy. Because of
their small mass and charge beta particles travel deep into tissues and cause cellular damage and possible cancer.
See also Radiation Shielding. •
Beta radiation consists of high energetic electrons or positrons emitted spontaneously from nuclei in decay of some radionuclides. Also called beta particle and sometimes shortened to beta (e.g., beta-emitting radionuclides). Beta radiation is used for example in cancer treatment. The average reach of beta radiation in tissue is 3.5 mm. See also Beta Decay. Further Reading: Basics:
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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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This elementary particle was already proposed in 1930 by Wolfgang Pauli and in 1934 by Enrico Fermi , and gets detected experimentally by Clyde Cowan and Fred Reines in 1956.
In addition to the electron-, antielectron-neutrino the discovery of the muon-, antimuon-neutrino in 1962 and the tau-, antitau-neutrino in 2000 followed. Neutrinos have no charge, a very small mass and interact rarely with matter, which make them difficult to detect. During beta decay, a neutron converts into a proton, an electron and an antineutrino, which is emitted. Some of today's Research projects try to find out the concrete mass of neutrinos or if neutrinos can change from one neutrino type to another. Further Reading: Basics:
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