PC Chapter 44
PC Chapter 44
Nuclear Structure
Milestones in the Development
of Nuclear Physics
1896: the birth of nuclear physics
Becquerel discovered radioactivity in
uranium compounds
Rutherford showed the radiation had
three types:
alpha (He nucleus)
beta (electrons)
gamma (high-energy photons)
More Milestones
1911 Rutherford, Geiger and
Marsden performed scattering
experiments
Established that the nucleus could be
treated as a point mass and a point
charge
Most of the atomic mass was contained
in the nucleus
Nuclear force was a new type of force
Milestones, final
1930: Cockcroft and Walton first observed
nuclear reactions using artificially accelerated
nuclei
1932: Chadwick discovered the neutron
1933: Curies discovered artificial radioactivity
1938: Hahn and Strassmann discovered
nuclear fission
1942: Fermi and collaborators achieved the
first controlled nuclear fission reactor
Some Properties of Nuclei
All nuclei are composed of protons and
neutrons
Exception is ordinary hydrogen with just a
proton
The atomic number Z equals the number
of protons in the nucleus
Sometimes called the charge number
The neutron number N is the number of
neutrons in the nucleus
More Properties of Nuclei
The mass number A is the number of
nucleons in the nucleus
A=Z+N
Nucleon is a generic term used to refer to
either a proton or a neutron
The mass number is not the same as the
mass
Symbolism
A
Z X
X is the chemical symbol of the element
Example:
Mass number is 27
27
13 Al
Atomic number is 13
Contains 13 protons
Contains 14 (27 – 13) neutrons
The Z may be omitted since the element
can be used to determine Z
More Properties
The nuclei of all atoms of a particular
element must contain the same number of
protons
They may contain varying numbers of
neutrons
Isotopes of an element have the same Z but
differing N and A values
The natural abundance of isotopes can vary
Example: 11 C 12
C 13
C 14
, , , 6C
6 6 6
Charge
The proton has a single positive charge, e
The electron has a single negative
charge, - e
The neutron has no charge
Makes it difficult to detect
e = 1.602 177 33 x 10-19 C
Mass
It is convenient to use atomic mass
units, u, to express masses
1 u = 1.660 539 x 10-27 kg
Based on definition that the mass of one
atom of 12C is exactly 12 u
Mass can also be expressed in MeV/c2
From ER = mc2
1 u = 931.494 MeV/c2
Some Masses in Various
Units
The Size of the Nucleus
ro = 1.2 x 10-15 m
A is the mass number
Density of Nuclei
The volume of the nucleus
(assumed to be spherical) is
directly proportional to the
total number of nucleons
This suggests that all nuclei
have nearly the same
density
Since r3 would be proportional
to A
Nucleons combine to form a
nucleus as though they were
tightly packed spheres
Nuclear Stability
There are very large repulsive electrostatic
forces between protons
These forces should cause the nucleus to fly apart
The nuclei are stable because of the
presence of another, short-range force, called
the nuclear force
This is an attractive force that acts between all
nuclear particles
The nuclear attractive force is stronger than the
Coulomb repulsive force at the short ranges within
the nucleus
Features of the Nuclear Force
Attractive force that acts between all nuclear
particles
It is the strongest force in nature
Very short range
It falls to zero when the separation between
particles exceeds about several fermis
Independent of charge
The nuclear force on p-p, p-n, n-n are all the same
Does not affect electrons
Its magnitude depends on the relative spin
orientations of the nucleons
Nuclear Stability, cont.
Light nuclei are most
stable if N = Z
Heavy nuclei are most
stable when N > Z
Above about Z = 20
As the number of protons
increases, the Coulomb
force increases and so
more neutrons are needed
to keep the nucleus stable
No nuclei are stable
when Z > 83
Binding Energy
The total energy of the bound system
(the nucleus) is less than the combined
energy of the separated nucleons
This difference in energy is called the
binding energy of the nucleus
It can be thought of as the amount of energy
you need to add to the nucleus to break it apart
into its components
Binding Energy, cont.
The binding energy can be calculated
from conservation of energy and the
Einstein mass-energy equivalence
principle:
Eb = (Zmp + Nmn – MA) x 931.494 MeV/u
The masses are expressed in atomic mass
units
Binding Energy per Nucleon
Notes from the Graph
The curve peaks in the vicinity of A = 60
Nuclei with mass numbers greater than or less
than 60 are not as strongly bound as those near
the middle of the periodic table
The binding energy is about 8 MeV per
nucleon for nuclei with A > 50
This suggests that the nuclear force saturates
A particular nucleon can interact with only a limited
number of other nucleons
Nuclear Models
Two models of the nucleus will be
discussed
Liquid-drop model
Provides good agreement with observed
nuclear binding energies
Shell model
Predicts the existence of stable nuclei
Liquid-Drop Model
Nucleons are treated like molecules in a
drop of liquid
The nucleons interact strongly with one
another
They undergo frequent collisions as
they jiggle around in the nucleus
Liquid-Drop Model – Effects
Influencing Binding Energy, 1
The volume effect
The nuclear force on a given nucleon is
due only to a few nearest neighbors and
not to all the other nucleons in the nucleus
The total binding energy is proportional to
A and therefore proportional to the nuclear
volume
This contribution to the binding energy of
the entire nucleus is C1A
Liquid-Drop Model –
Binding Energy Effect 2
The surface effect
Nucleons on the surface have fewer
neighbors than those in the interior
Surface nucleons reduce the binding
energy by an amount proportional to their
number
The number of nucleons is proportional to
the surface area
The surface term can be expressed as
–C2A2/3
Liquid-Drop Model –
Binding Energy Effect 3
The Coulomb repulsion effect
Each proton repels every other proton in
the nucleus
The potential energy associated with the
Coulomb force is proportional to the
number of protons, Z
The reduction in the binding energy due to
the Coulomb effect is –C3Z(Z - 1)/A1/3
Liquid-Drop Model –
Binding Energy Effect 4
The symmetry effect
Any large symmetry between N and Z for light
nuclei reduces the binding energy
For larger A, the value of N for stable nuclei is
larger
The effect can be described by a binding energy
term in the form –C4(N - Z)2 / A
For small A, any large asymmetry between N and Z
makes the term large
For large A, the A in the denominator reduces the value
of the term so that it has little effect on the overall binding
energy
Liquid-Drop Model – Binding
Energy Effect Summary
Putting these terms together results in the
semiempirical binding-energy formula:
Gamma rays
The “rays” are high energy photons
Distinguishing Types of
Radiation
The gamma particles
carry no charge
The alpha particles
are deflected upward
The beta particles are
deflected downward
A positron would be
deflected upward, but
would follow a different
trajectory than the α due
to its mass
Penetrating Ability of Particles
Alpha particles
Barely penetrate a piece of paper
Beta particles
Can penetrate a few mm of aluminum
Gamma rays
Can penetrate several cm of lead
The Decay Constant
The number of particles that decay in a given
time is proportional to the total number of
particles in a radioactive sample
dN
λN gives N Noe λt
dt
λ is called the decay constant and determines
the rate at which the material will decay
N is the number of undecayed radioactive nuclei
present
No is the number of undecayed nuclei at time t = 0
Decay Curve
The decay curve follows
the equation N = Noe-λt
The half-life is also a
useful parameter
The half-life is defined as
the time interval during
which half of a given
number of radioactive
nuclei decay
ln 2 0.693
T1 2
λ λ
Active Figure 44.9