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Introduction to SAT II Physics - FreeExamPapers

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Since there are two nucleons in a deuteron, the binding energy for the deuteron as a<br />

whole is<br />

MeV. That energy, converted in<strong>to</strong> mass, is:<br />

The mass of a free pro<strong>to</strong>n plus a free neutron is 1.0073 + 1.0086 = 2.0159 amu. The mass<br />

of the deuteron will be 0.0024 amu less than this amount, since that is the amount of<br />

mass converted in<strong>to</strong> energy that binds the pro<strong>to</strong>n and the neutron <strong>to</strong>gether. So the<br />

deuteron will weigh 2.0159 – 0.0024 = 2.0135 amu.<br />

Decay Rates<br />

On <strong>SAT</strong> <strong>II</strong> <strong>Physics</strong>, you probably won’t be expected <strong>to</strong> calculate how long it takes a<br />

radioactive nucleus <strong>to</strong> decay, but you will be expected <strong>to</strong> know how the rate of decay<br />

works. If we take a sample of a certain radioactive element, we say that its activity, A, is<br />

the number of nuclei that decay per second. Obviously, in a large sample, A will be<br />

greater than in a small sample. However, there is a constant, called the decay constant,<br />

, that holds for a given iso<strong>to</strong>pe regardless of the sample size. We can use the decay<br />

constant <strong>to</strong> calculate, at a given time, t, the number of disintegrations per second, A; the<br />

number of radioactive nuclei, N; or the mass of the radioactive sample, m:<br />

, , and are the values at time t = 0. The mathematical constant e is<br />

approximately 2.718.<br />

The decay constant for uranium-238 is about s –1 . After one million years, a 1.00<br />

kg sample of uranium-238 (which has<br />

a<strong>to</strong>ms) will contain<br />

Uranium-238 is one of the slower decaying radioactive elements.<br />

Half-Life<br />

We generally measure the radioactivity of a certain element in terms of its half-life,<br />

, the amount of time it takes for half of a given sample <strong>to</strong> decay. The equation for half-life,<br />

which can be derived from the equations above, is:<br />

340

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