PHYSICS OF THE ATOMIC
NUCLEUS
The nomenclature for nuclei is
AZChN where A = N +
Z. Usually N is left off since we know it immediately from
N = A - Z. Thus, 2713Al.
The strong nuclear force is
attractive, and does not distinguish between protons and
neutrons. But two effects continually fight against it... the
electrical repulsion of protons, and the Pauli principle, which
allows p and n into the same state, but not 2p or 2n!
The typical nuclear density is
about 2 x 1017 kg/m3, while the density of
a single proton or neutron is more like 2 times as great. Thus
the nucleus is not like the cartoons of closely packed spheres,
it is more like a compact swarm of bees.
The binding energy of nuclei
can be defined as B = [Zmp + Nmn −
M(A,Z)]c2. B/A varies
from about 1 to 9 MeV for stable nuclei. The most tightly
bound nucleus is 56Fe.
The simplest possible
nucleus! (click here)
What happens to a nucleus that is
not stable? Nuclei with too many protons or too many neutrons
are unstable to the weak nuclear force, which can change n to p,
or p to n. This is called “beta decay.” Nuclei that have too
many nucleons are unstable to barrier penetration, in which 4He
clusters tunnel out. This is called “alpha decay.” Following
either of these two decays, the resulting nucleus can be left in
an excited state, and will transition to the ground state by
emitting a photon with a kinetic energy of several MeV. This is
called “gamma decay.” Nuclei very far from stability can
emit protons or He nuclei no matter how few nucleons they
contain.
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