What is Gamma ray: Definition and 129 Discussions

A gamma ray, also known as gamma radiation (symbol γ or



γ


{\displaystyle \gamma }
), is a penetrating form of electromagnetic radiation arising from the radioactive decay of atomic nuclei. It consists of the shortest wavelength electromagnetic waves and so imparts the highest photon energy. Paul Villard, a French chemist and physicist, discovered gamma radiation in 1900 while studying radiation emitted by radium. In 1903, Ernest Rutherford named this radiation gamma rays based on their relatively strong penetration of matter; in 1900 he had already named two less penetrating types of decay radiation (discovered by Henri Becquerel) alpha rays and beta rays in ascending order of penetrating power.
Gamma rays from radioactive decay are in the energy range from a few kiloelectronvolts (keV) to approximately 8 megaelectronvolts (~8 MeV), corresponding to the typical energy levels in nuclei with reasonably long lifetimes. The energy spectrum of gamma rays can be used to identify the decaying radionuclides using gamma spectroscopy. Very-high-energy gamma rays in the 100–1000 teraelectronvolt (TeV) range have been observed from sources such as the Cygnus X-3 microquasar.
Natural sources of gamma rays originating on Earth are mostly as a result of radioactive decay and secondary radiation from atmospheric interactions with cosmic ray particles. However, there are other rare natural sources, such as terrestrial gamma-ray flashes, which produce gamma rays from electron action upon the nucleus. Notable artificial sources of gamma rays include fission, such as that which occurs in nuclear reactors, and high energy physics experiments, such as neutral pion decay and nuclear fusion.
Gamma rays and X-rays are both electromagnetic radiation, and since they overlap in the electromagnetic spectrum, the terminology varies between scientific disciplines. In some fields of physics, they are distinguished by their origin: Gamma rays are created by nuclear decay, while in the case of X-rays, the origin is outside the nucleus. In astrophysics, gamma rays are conventionally defined as having photon energies above 100 keV and are the subject of gamma ray astronomy, while radiation below 100 keV is classified as X-rays and is the subject of X-ray astronomy. This convention stems from the early man-made X-rays, which had energies only up to 100 keV, whereas many gamma rays could go to higher energies. A large fraction of astronomical gamma rays are screened by Earth's atmosphere.
Gamma rays are ionizing radiation and are thus biologically hazardous. Due to their high penetration power, they can damage bone marrow and internal organs. Unlike alpha and beta rays, they pass easily through the body and thus pose a formidable radiation protection challenge, requiring shielding made from dense materials such as lead or concrete.
Gamma rays cannot be reflected off a mirror and their wavelengths are so small that they will pass between atoms in a detector.

View More On Wikipedia.org
  1. jim mcnamara

    Gamma ray bursts (GRB's) and the Ordovician Mass Extinction

    99% of all marine fossil generating species on Earth that ever existed have gone extinct. There are periods in the fossil record that show massive extinction rates. For example, the K-T (now the K-Pg) boundary marks the extinction of dinosaurs in the fossil record along with marine animals, at...
  2. S

    Gamma Ray Ionization Path to Overcome Potential

    If a gamma ray is being fired and is in turn colliding with electrons and ionizing the electrons in the gamma ray path, where do the electrons tend to? In what direction is the current most likely to flow for a high powered gamma ray ionization?
  3. G

    How to measure the location of Gamma ray burst ?

    I have read articles about the GRB measurement using X-ray from afterglow. The article tells that the gamma ray provides poor directional information.Why? How can we use X-ray for measurement?
  4. D

    The 'fermi Line' (the 130 GEv gamma ray signal)

    http://arxiv.org/abs/1206.1616 Strong Evidence for Gamma-ray Line Emission from the Inner Galaxy - Meng Su, Douglas P. Finkbeiner Analysis of data from the Fermi telescope shows "monochromatic" gamma ray emission at 130 GeV from the centre of the galaxy. This paper is generating a lot...
  5. S

    Gamma Ray Laser, possible? Superior Weapon?

    Hello there. I am wondering if anyone can shed some light on this topic. I am searching all over the Internet to find reliable sources on the possibility of gamma ray lasers. I know that it requires an atom that can be "pumped" without spontaneously emitting its energy so it can be triggered by...
  6. R

    K-40 Gamma Ray Branching Ratio: 10.67%

    what do u mean by gamma ray branching ratio of 'k-40' is 10.67%?
  7. S

    Gamma ray pulse height spectrum

    Homework Statement A radioactive source which is known to emit gamma rays only at a single energy is placed in front of a gamma ray detector. The gamma ray pulse height spectrum shows three distinct pulse heights of 7.38,6.49 and 5.60 volts. What is the energy of the gamma ray? The Attempt...
  8. T

    Gamma Ray Energy from Decay of Boron

    Homework Statement I have to figure how many beta particles are released and how much energy is released as gamma rays in the complete decay of 1000 atoms of (12/5) Boron. Homework Equations Mass of one boron atom is 10.811 g. I think we may be able to use E = mc^2 somehow but I'm not sure...
  9. L

    Gamma ray colliding with an electron

    Homework Statement A beam of gamma rays of energy 1.00 MeV are aimed at a set of freely moving gold particles. The gamma rays reflected back have an energy of 0.2035 MeV. How is this result consistent with the model of a gamma ray reflecting from an isolated electron initially at rest...
  10. D

    Gamma Ray Microscope: Can it be Directed and Focused?

    I was in my AP Physics class discussing wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum and I came up with the idea to attempt a gamma ray microscope. Of course this is extremely dangerous, so I will have to be cautious (and use a lot of lead). Is there a way to produce gamma rays? I know they...
  11. A

    Gamma Ray Decay to potential watts

    I'm interested in calculating how much power (in Watts) could be produced (assuming a 100% conversion efficiency between Gamma Rays and electrical power) from gamma decay of a 60 Co -> 60 Ni. How long would this reaction last? Just a few seconds or longer? Are there any decays that last for a...
  12. C

    Assumption that Anti-Matter Galaxies Would Emit Detectable Gamma Ray Bursts

    In the hunt for antimatter galaxies, the tools that we are currently using look for gamma rays that would be emitted due to annihilation events, because everything else about these galaxies is predicted to be the same emission-wise. The hypothesis is that these annihilation events would occur...
  13. S

    Why Do We See So Many Gamma Ray Bursts?

    So, if my understanding of GRBs is correct, they are a collimated jet of material that produces a lot of gamma rays. So my question is, don't these have to be pointing right at us for us to see them? If so, then why do we see so many? I think it's at around at least one per day, the last time...
  14. A

    Gamma Ray Bursters vs Quasars?

    Okay, so this may be a little bit of a trivial question, but I've read conflicting information and found myself confused as a result. I've read from several sources (wikipedia, books) that GRB's are the most luminous events known to occur in our universe. However, I've also read that...
  15. S

    Exploring Gamma Ray Bursts: Causes, Effects & Interest

    I've been reading about gamma ray bursts (GRBs) lately and have found them to be pretty interesting. As far as I have read, it appears that we still don't know much about what actually causes them, or rather, how the "internal engine" works. The most popular idea for longer lasting GRBs is a...
  16. N

    What would happen if the sun was hit by a gamma ray burst?

    Now I am wondering what would happen to the sun if it was hit by the nearest gamma ray burst (I believe the nearest one is 6.7 Light years away). Now I understand that a gamma ray burst is going to be more radiation than what the sun produces in its lifetime. I also know that the sun is just one...
  17. N

    Gamma ray spectroscopy of deuteron formation

    For my advanced physics lab course this semester, I recently conducted an experiment using a hyper-pure germanium detector to measure the energy of gamma rays released upon the formation of deuterium (DF). Essentially, I used a neutron source to bombard a hydrogen rich target (used both...
  18. L

    Gamma Ray Experiment: Measure Voltage, Linear Absorption Coefficient & Test 1/r2

    Homework Statement In my honours lab we had to perform the Gamma ray experiment in which we have to measure the operating voltage of a Geiger Muller tube for a radio active source say Cs-137. With this we want to measure the linear absorption coefficients of lead and aluminium. Test the...
  19. A

    Could a star survive a direct hit from a gamma ray burst?

    What would happen to a star if it took a direct hit from a gamma ray burst? For example if a gamma ray burst from a supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy hit a star, would the star survive? If so, how would the grb effect the star? If not, would the star explode...
  20. M

    Does a gamma ray photon have less energy than a radiowave photon?

    I'm wondering because the gamma ray photon is smaller yet it has a higher frequency. Is it because the amount of energy that passes a single point in a second for a gamma ray is higher than that of radio waves, since a lot more photons are passing that single point that in other em radiation?
  21. Simfish

    Do nearby gamma ray busts/supernova damage *more* than just the ozone layer?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near-Earth_supernova So we know that many people are putting hard constraints on the galactic habitability zone based on the presence of nearby supernova/gamma ray bursts. But if they *only* affect the ozone layer, then I doubt that it's as hard of a constraint as...
  22. L

    Project: Detect Gamma Rays with Cesium & Geiger Counter

    Hi, I need to make a project to demonstrate Gamma rays. I have cesium as a source to use and a geiger counter to detect gamma rays. Ideas are welcome!
  23. S

    Can High Energy Gamma Rays Interact with Protium and Heat It Up?

    Hi All, How can a high energy (above 1 MeV) gamma ray interact with a protium (hydrogen with only a proton in nucleus)? Does it only ionize it? Does it break it up? Does a chain reaction occur where antiparticles are formed and then annihilated, spitting out another gamma ray? I've been...
  24. M

    Gamma ray coincidence and multipoles

    Dear Physics Forums, I am currently conducting an experiment on gamma ray coincidence from Co-60. Co-60 decays to an excited state, then de-excited by emitting two gamma rays. The aim is to deduce the angular momentum L of the first excited state. Apparently L indicates the type of...
  25. A

    Why Gamma Ray Emission Has No Change in A or Z?

    Why in gamma ray emission there is no change in A or Z ? We know that in Alpha decay 2 protons and 2 neutrons are subtracted from the element. and in Beta decay there is change in atomic number by + or - 1. but why there is no any change in Gamma Decay in mass number A or atomic number. i...
  26. G

    What is the highest frequency gamma ray emitted by any nucleus?

    whats the highest frequency gamma ray normally emitted by any nucleus something that I read said that gamma rays were normally less than 10 Mev
  27. R

    Solvent heat up due to gamma ray

    I am planning to use a gamma ray densitometer to measure the local concentration of slurry flow in a pipe loop. Since i am using an organic solvent(flammable) to make the slurry, i am worried that gamma ray passing through it will heat it up significantly and cause hazard. I would like to...
  28. P

    Fermi Gamma Ray Telescope: Ruling Out Lorentz-Violating Theories

    The almost simultaneous detection of low energy and high energy photons puts tight constraints on models predicting linear dependence of c on E. But it's very far from ruling out quadratic dependence. My question is, why do Lorentz-violating theories commonly predict linear rather than quadratic...
  29. V

    Understanding Gamma Ray Bursts: Can We Predict & Model?

    I've been reading up on Gamma-Ray bursts, and one thing which has struck me is that, when described through light curves, no burst appears to be the same. Given the phenomenon seem to be based on standard principles, that doesn't make sense to me - behavior cannot be random. Is there any way to...
  30. C

    Detection of Gamma Rays | Atomic Nucleus Decay

    Hi I'm studying decay of atomic nucleus. Alpha and beta rays are essentially particles and their path are easily traced. But high frequency gamma rays easily penetrate metal foils, and I wonder that how gamma rays are practically detected and measured in lab experiments? Is photo-electric...
  31. N

    Collapsed hypergiant forms a gamma ray pulsating black hole

    I am having a hard time understanding the theory that a collapsed hypergiant forms a gamma ray pulsating black hole. Can someone explain how the em radiation can travel so fast with such energy as to not only escape the event horizon but also do so with such intensity?
  32. Jonnyb42

    Potential for Gamma Ray Bursts to Pose a Threat to Earth?

    Are there any known celestial bodies that at any time could collapse and produce a GRB directed towards earth? I know WR 104 used to be one, but they discovered it to be off at an angle.
  33. K

    How to read a Gamma Ray Spectrum

    For some of my work, I am investigating methods of scanning for nuclear material. As part of my study, I have run across Gamma Ray Spectroscopy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma_spectroscopy" What I am having trouble with is reading a gamma ray spectrum (I am a software engineer with a...
  34. R

    What Would Happen if a Gamma Ray Burst Hit Our Sun?

    I enjoy asking myself random questions and then finding the answers online i.e. forums however, I could not find the answer to this one. What would happen if a gamma ray burst hit a star or specifically our sun?
  35. D

    Calculating Gamma Ray Emission Recoil Speed

    Homework Statement A 67-Zn nucleus is at rest and in its first excited state, 93.3 keV above the ground state. The nucleus then decays to the ground state with the emission of a gamma ray. (One atomic mass unit is 931.5 MeV/c2.) What is the recoil speed of the nucleus? (You can assume...
  36. S

    Calculating Distance for Equivalence of Gamma Ray and Solar Radiation Power

    Given the energy if sun were to instantly vaporize (using E = mc^2) = 2.7 x 10^47 J ( E = (mass of sun) * c^2) how far would one have to be from a gamma ray burst is order for the average power from it to be equivalent to the average power from the sun's radiation at the Earth (solar...
  37. S

    Distance from gamma ray?

    Given the energy if sun were to instantly vaporize (using E = mc^2) = 2.7 x 10^47 J ( E = (mass of sun) * c^2) how far would one have to be from a gamma ray burst in order for the average power from it to be equivalent to the average power from the sun's radiation at the Earth (solar...
  38. R

    Gamma Ray Alternative for Solar Eclipse Study of Relativity

    Validation of relativity has been tested by measuring the apparent position of stars as our view passes by the edge of the sun. A difficulty being that we can not easily view stars with the sun so bright so we wait for an eclipse. I have a few questions: 1) Is this still a difficulty...
  39. Q

    Gamma ray spectroscopy: Germanium detector efficiency calibration.

    Hi all, Got a bit of a problem with a lab experiment at uni (I'm not sure if this is the right place to post this, mods feel free to move it if necessary!) Anyway: We're trying to get a plot of efficiency against energy for a planar germanium detector. We've got spectra for different...
  40. N

    Scenario of gamma ray bursts if it were to come into contact with the earth's ozone

    Is there a video of that kind of scenario floating around youtube? Have not had any luck finding a video of such a scenario.
  41. O

    Gamma ray Energy Spectrum of Cd-109 and Sn-113

    Hi, For my experiment, i need the gamma ray energy spectrum of Cd-109 and Sn-113 with NaI detector. would anyone help me please? thanks everyone.
  42. D

    WR104 Gamma Ray Burst: Fact or Fiction?

    Sorry if I sound crazy, but I just heard about this and would like a reliable fact check before I worry. So I recently heard about this binary star system known as WR104. I read that it was pointed right at us and, at some point in the future, it will release a gamma ray burst that will wipe...
  43. J

    Finding the distance of a gamma ray travels in lead

    Homework Statement The ‘half-thickness’ tells us the thickness of a given material needed to absorb half the incident photons from a particular source. Find the average distance of a gamma ray in lead before its first collision. I have a value for the half thickness (and equivalent half...
  44. Q

    Exploring Fusion Reactions in Stars: Proton + Deuteron to 3He + Gamma Ray

    Homework Statement One of the thermonuclear or fusion reactions that takes place inside a star such as our Sun is the production of helium-3 (3He, with two protons and one neutron) and a gamma ray (high-energy photon, denoted by the lowercase Greek letter gamma, ) in a collision between a...
  45. T

    Trying to comprehend the explosive power of a gamma ray burst?

    I'm not sure if this thread fits into this particular forum, but about how many megatons would be equal to the explosive power of a gamma ray burst?
  46. parazit

    Create a home made muon or gamma ray detector?

    Hi.I wonder is it possible to create a home made muon or gamma ray detector? And if it is possible would you mind to show me some way? Thanks...
  47. V

    Is Gamma Ray Emission from a Black Hole Really Possible?

    I just can't comprehend that gamma ray can come out of a black hole. Gamma rays are electromagnetism which contain photons, but photons have no mass. And we all know that a black hole swoops up light as well. And what recaton has the gamma ray on the mass around the black hole? I know It's true...
  48. D

    Finding energy of gamma ray with spectoscopy

    Hey everyone, I need to be able to be able to explain how a gamma spectrometer (NaI scintillator) can determine the energy of a given gamma ray (or more particularly, determines the effective dose rate, but that shouldn't be to hard once I figure out how to get the energy). The problem, as far...
  49. D

    What is frequency of a gamma ray emitted from a supernova

    From what i have read the gamma ray frequency cap ranges from 3×10^19 to 3×10^24. I want to know what you guys have heard it is. Are the highest measured gamma ray from a supernova calculated with any time dialated effects? Also what is the thoertical cap of something higher than a gamma ray...
Back
Top