Lecture 6
Lecture 6
Lecture Six
(Nuclear Reactions)
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Nuclear Physics Lecture Six
To shorten the notation a reaction of the type above is designated by:
X(a,b)Y
Commonly, one reaction product is light and the other heavy because of the
binding energies of the nuclei involved. In some cases b and Y have comparable masses
(spallation reaction or fission), or are identical. If b is a gamma ray, we speak of a
capture reaction in which Y is the compound nucleus.
In most cases in which more than two products appear, it is possible to describe
the process as a rapid sequence of two-product reactions
a+X→b1+Y1
Y1→b2+Y2
Y2→b3+Y3
For example, see the reaction: 4He + 14N → 1H + 17O
Note that the number of neutrons and protons is conserved. Presently the number
of known reactions is in the thousands.
There are two frames to classify the nuclear reactions, consider an elastic
collision with a nucleus of mass M. In the lab frame, the nucleus is initially at rest and
the particle has energy Eo and momentum mvo. After the scattering, energy of the
particle is E1, speed v1 at an angle ϕ with vo, while the nucleus recoil gives a momentum
MV at an angle ψ.
The collision is better analyzed in the center of mass frame, where the condition
of elastic scattering implies that the relative velocities only change their direction but
not their magnitude. The center of mass velocity is defined as
Where we defined ϑ as the scattering angle in the center of mass frame, see the figures
below:
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Figure (6-2): Neutron scattering from a nucleus. In left, laboratory frame, in right,
center of mass frame.
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Heavy nuclei, if A ≥ 150
If the light reaction product is identical to the incident particle and has identical
energy (in the c.m. system), the reaction is called elastic scattering. If only the energy
is different, inelastic scattering occurs. If only gamma rays are emitted, we speak of a
capture reaction. If the product nuclei have comparable masses, the reaction is called
spallation or fission.
As an illustration, we give the following examples in the shorthand notation
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N(p,p)14N proton elastic scattering
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N(p,p)14N* proton inelastic scattering
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N(p,α)11C or 11C* (p,α) reaction
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N(p,γ)15O or 15O* proton-capture reaction
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N(γ,p)13C or 13C* photonuclear reaction
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N(n,6Li)9Be or 9Be* spallation reaction
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Be(6Li,n)14N or 14N* heavy-ion reaction
Conservation laws:
These may be listed as follows.
(i) Conservation of linear momentum,
(ii) Conservation of total angular momentum i.e.
Where denote the angular momenta in the initial and final nuclei and
denote the relative angular momenta in the entrance (X,a) and final (Y,b) channels.
(iii) Conservation of proton (charge) and neutron number is not a strict conservation
law. Under general conditions, one has conservation of charge and conservation of
nucleon or baryon (strongly interacting particles) number.
(iv) Conservation of parity, π, such that
𝜋𝑋. 𝜋𝑎. 𝜋(𝑋,𝑎) = 𝜋𝑌. 𝜋𝑏. 𝜋(𝑌,𝑏)
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Where the parities of the initial and final nuclei and projectiles (incoming, outgoing)
are considered.
𝑄 = ∑ 𝑇𝑓 − ∑ 𝑇𝑖 = 𝑇𝑌 + 𝑇𝑏 − 𝑇𝑋 − 𝑇𝑎
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3- (γ,n) reaction: Energetic photons (gamma rays) can also interact with a nucleus.
For example neutrons can be produced by irradiating deuterium with sufficiently
energetic photons according to the reaction
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H + γ → 1H + n or 2H(γ,n)1H
4- (p,γ) reaction: Protons can cause nuclear reactions such as the radiative capture
of a proton by 7Li, namely
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Li + 1H → 8Be + γ or 7Li(p,γ)8Be*
The product nucleus 8Be is not bound and breaks up (radioactively decays)
almost immediately into two alpha particles.
5- (γ,αn) reaction: As an example of a reaction in which more than two products
are produced, a high-energy photon can cause 17O to split into 12C, an α particle
and a neutron through the reaction
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O + γ → 12C + α + n
6- (n,p) reaction: Fast neutrons can cause a variety of nuclear reactions. For
example, in a reactor core, fast neutrons can interact with 16O to produce 16N,
which radioactively decays (half-life of 7.12s) with the emission of a 6.13MeV
16
(69%) or a 7.11MeV (5%) photon. The radionuclide N is produced by the
reaction
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O + n → 16N + 1H or 16O(n,p)16N*.
7- Proton-Proton Cycle
𝑝 + 𝑝 → 𝑑 + 𝑒+ + 𝜈 ⟹ 𝑝 + 𝑑 ⟶ 3𝐻𝑒 + 𝛾 ⟹ 3𝐻𝑒 + 3𝐻𝑒 ⟶ 4𝐻𝑒 + 𝑝 + 𝑝
2 2 2 2
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2𝐻 + 2𝐻 ⟶ 3𝐻 + 1𝐻 + 4.03𝑀𝑒𝑉
1 1 1 1
2𝐻 + 3𝐻 ⟶ 4𝐻𝑒 + 𝑛 + 17.6𝑀𝑒𝑉
1 1 2
Definitions:
1- Stopping power: A more important quantity is the average energy loss of the
particle per unit path length, which is called the stopping power.
2- Range: The range is more precisely defined as the distance a particle travels
before coming to rest.
3- Cross Section:
Classically, the cross section is the area on which a colliding projectile can
impact. Thus for example the cross section of a spherical target of radius r is just given
by πr2. The cross section has then units of an area. Let’s consider for example a
nucleus with mass number A. The radius of the nucleus is then R=RoA1/3=1.2A1/3fm
and the classical cross section would be σ = πRo2A2/3 ≈ 5A2/3fm2. For a typical heavy
nucleus, such as gold, A = 197, we have σ ≈ 100fm2=1barn (symbol b, 1b = 10−28m2=
10−24cm2= 100fm2. When scattering a particle off a target however, what becomes
important is not the head-on collision (as between balls) but the interaction between
the particle and the target (e.g.
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Coulomb, nuclear interaction, weak interaction etc.). For macroscopic objects the
details of these interactions are lumped together and hidden. For single particles this
is not the case, and for example we can as well have a collision even if the distance
between projectile and target is larger than the target radius. Thus the cross section
takes on a different meaning and it is now defined as the effective area or more
precisely as a measure of the probability of a collision. Even in the classical analogy,
it is easy to see why the cross section has this statistical meaning, since in a collision
there is a certain (probabilistic) distribution of the impact distance. The cross section
also describes the probability of a given (nuclear) reaction to occur, are action that can
be generally written as:
a+X→Y+b or X(a,b)Y
where X is an heavy target and (a) a small projectile (such as a neutron, proton,
alpha...) while Y and b are the reaction products (again with b being nucleons or light
nucleus, or in some cases a gamma ray). Then let Ia be the current of incoming
particles, hitting on an heavy (hence stationary) target. The heavy product Y will also
be almost stationary and only (b) will escape the material and be measured. Thus we
will observe the (b) products arriving at a detector at a rate Rb. If there are
(n) target nuclei per unit area, the cross section can then be written as:
Rb
σ=
Ian
This quantity does not always agree with the estimated cross section based on
the nucleus radius. For example, proton scattering x-section can be higher than
neutrons, because of the Coulomb interaction. Neutrinos x-section then will be even
smaller, because they only interact via the weak interaction.