The term radioactivity was given to
uranium by Marie Curie who said that it
gave out radiation all the time
We can use a Geiger counter to detect
radioactivity, where the counter will click each
time a particle from a radioactive substance
enters the Geiger tube
Ernest Rutherford
discovered two types
of radiation:
- alpha radiation
who’s symbol is α
- beta radiation
who’s symbol is β
Scientists later
discovered a third
type, gamma
radiation, written γ
The nuclei of atoms of
radioactive elements are
unstable
An unstable nucleus becomes stable by
emitting alpha, beta or gamma radiation – this
is known also as decaying
Alpha, beta and gamma radiation
Alpha particles are helium nuclei, and cannot even penetrate a
human hand or piece of paper
Beta particles are negative electron which can
penetrate a thin aluminium sheet
Radiation from a radioactive substance can knock
electrons out of atoms. These atoms become charged
because they have lost electrons.
Gamma rays are electromagnetic
waves which can penetrate some
concrete
Beta’s range is about 1m in air
Gamma radiation’s range is
approximately 10,000km – but we
often say it is unlimited
Radioactive half-life
Atoms of elements can
contain identical amounts of
protons but different amounts
of electrons – these are
called isotopes
The activity of a
radioactive substance is
the number of atoms
that decay per second
The number of clicks per minute that a Geiger
tube detects from a radioactive substance is
the count rate
The time taken for the count rate of a
radioactive substance to half is its
half-life
The half-life of a radioactive
isotope is the time it takes:
- for the number of nuclei of
the isotope in a sample to
half
- for the count rare of the isotope
to fall to half its initial value
Useful radiation
Radioactivity can be harmful
to us and our skin, but it serves
some uses
Automatic thickness
monitoring
- if the thickness of the foil
increases too much, the detector
reading drops
- the detector sends a
signal to the rollers to
increase pressure on the
metal sheet
Radioactive tracers can be used for medical purposes.
Patients can drink a glass of water containing a small
amount of a radioactive substance, if they want to test their
kidneys. The substance would simply flow in and out of
healthy kidney, but a blocked kidney would not allow the
substance to exit for a lot longer
- This means that for a normal kidney the radioactive reading goes up then down
- …and for a blocked kidney, the reading goes up and stays up
Radioactive dating is a process where we can find out
how old things are by using radioactivity. There are two
types…
Carbon dating is used to
find the age of ancient
wood and trees
Uranium dating is used to
find the age of igneous
rocks