What is Radioactive decay: Definition and 215 Discussions

Radioactive decay (also known as nuclear decay, radioactivity, radioactive disintegration or nuclear disintegration) is the process by which an unstable atomic nucleus loses energy by radiation. A material containing unstable nuclei is considered radioactive. Three of the most common types of decay are alpha decay (𝛼-decay), beta decay (𝛽-decay), and gamma decay (𝛾-decay), all of which involve emitting one or more particles or photons. The weak force is the mechanism that is responsible for beta decay, while the other two are governed by the usual electromagnetic and strong forces.Radioactive decay is a stochastic (i.e. random) process at the level of single atoms. According to quantum theory, it is impossible to predict when a particular atom will decay, regardless of how long the atom has existed. However, for a significant number of identical atoms, the overall decay rate can be expressed as a decay constant or as half-life. The half-lives of radioactive atoms have a huge range; from nearly instantaneous to far longer than the age of the universe.
The decaying nucleus is called the parent radionuclide (or parent radioisotope), and the process produces at least one daughter nuclide. Except for gamma decay or internal conversion from a nuclear excited state, the decay is a nuclear transmutation resulting in a daughter containing a different number of protons or neutrons (or both). When the number of protons changes, an atom of a different chemical element is created.

Alpha decay occurs when the nucleus ejects an alpha particle (helium nucleus).
Beta decay occurs in two ways;
(i) beta-minus decay, when the nucleus emits an electron and an antineutrino in a process that changes a neutron to a proton.
(ii) beta-plus decay, when the nucleus emits a positron and a neutrino in a process that changes a proton to a neutron, also known as positron emission.
In gamma decay a radioactive nucleus first decays by the emission of an alpha or beta particle. The daughter nucleus that results is usually left in an excited state and it can decay to a lower energy state by emitting a gamma ray photon.
In neutron emission, extremely neutron-rich nuclei, formed due to other types of decay or after many successive neutron captures, occasionally lose energy by way of neutron emission, resulting in a change from one isotope to another of the same element.
In electron capture, the nucleus may capture an orbiting electron, causing a proton to convert into a neutron in a process called electron capture. A neutrino and a gamma ray are subsequently emitted.
In cluster decay and nuclear fission, a nucleus heavier than an alpha particle is emitted.By contrast, there are radioactive decay processes that do not result in a nuclear transmutation. The energy of an excited nucleus may be emitted as a gamma ray in a process called gamma decay, or that energy may be lost when the nucleus interacts with an orbital electron causing its ejection from the atom, in a process called internal conversion. Another type of radioactive decay results in products that vary, appearing as two or more "fragments" of the original nucleus with a range of possible masses. This decay, called spontaneous fission, happens when a large unstable nucleus spontaneously splits into two (or occasionally three) smaller daughter nuclei, and generally leads to the emission of gamma rays, neutrons, or other particles from those products.
In contrast, decay products from a nucleus with spin may be distributed non-isotropically with respect to that spin direction. Either because of an external influence such as an electromagnetic field, or because the nucleus was produced in a dynamic process that constrained the direction of its spin, the anisotropy may be detectable. Such a parent process could be a previous decay, or a nuclear reaction.For a summary table showing the number of stable and radioactive nuclides in each category, see radionuclide. There are 28 naturally occurring chemical elements on Earth that are radioactive, consisting of 34 radionuclides (6 elements have 2 different radionuclides) that date before the time of formation of the Solar System. These 34 are known as primordial nuclides. Well-known examples are uranium and thorium, but also included are naturally occurring long-lived radioisotopes, such as potassium-40.
Another 50 or so shorter-lived radionuclides, such as radium-226 and radon-222, found on Earth, are the products of decay chains that began with the primordial nuclides, or are the product of ongoing cosmogenic processes, such as the production of carbon-14 from nitrogen-14 in the atmosphere by cosmic rays. Radionuclides may also be produced artificially in particle accelerators or nuclear reactors, resulting in 650 of these with half-lives of over an hour, and several thousand more with even shorter half-lives. (See List of nuclides for a list of these sorted by half-life.)

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  1. M

    Simulate Gamma Rays from Radioactive Decay

    Hello, I am trying to simulate the gammas from certain radioactive decays but I am really puzzle as to how to approach this. The site I'm using as a reference lists the intensities of the different gammas corresponding to an specific decay. The thing that confuses me is that, for example...
  2. S

    Calculating Half-Life from Radioactive Decay

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  3. R

    Does amount of electrons orbiting an atom effect rate of radioactive decay?

    Do ions have a measurably different rate then their neutral counterpart or does the rate of radioactive decay and electrons have no correlation? Also, when a source states an elements half life is that the same for all of its isotopes?
  4. bayan

    Quantum tunneling and radioactive decay.

    Homework Statement The edge of a nucleus can be roughly modeled as a square potential barrier. An alpha particle in an unstable nucleus can be modeled as a particle with a specific energy, bouncing back and forth between these square potential barrier. Consider a nucleus of radius r and an...
  5. D

    Would like suggestions for studying igneous rocks and radioactive decay

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  6. A

    Is activity in radioactive decay a differential?

    According to my textbook, the decay constant is the probability that a radionuclide will decay in any second (hence the unit s^-1) and so the total number of radionuclides decaying at any second, i.e. the activity, is λN but this is also the rate of change of N thus dN/dt = -λN Surely...
  7. K

    How Do You Calculate the Age of Plant Material Using Radioactive Decay?

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  8. E

    Solving Radioactive Decay: Homework Equations and Attempt at Solution

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  9. D

    T "Understanding Radioactive Decay and Its Types: Explained by an Expert

    I am not quite sure why there are only four types of decays, alpha, beta plus and minus, and electron capture. I know that heavy nuclides undergo alpha decay because it is a fast way to loose 2 protons and 2 neutrons, also that the alpha particle is very stable. For beta plus and minus...
  10. K

    What is the cause of radioactive decay?

    I don't understand where radioactive decay comes from. Everything I've read discusses how the environment can influence the decay (for example, neutrons in different nuclei decay with different speeds), but I couldn't find an explanation of what is the underlying cause of the decay. If the...
  11. C

    Linear first-order diffeq system for radioactive decay chain

    Homework Statement Given the followin[Sg decay chain- X→Y→Z Solve for Nx(t), Ny(t), Nz(t) for the case of Rx(t)=\alphat and assuming Ny(t)=Nz(t)=0 Homework Equations dNx(t)/dt = -\lambdaxNx(t) + Rx(t) dNy(t)/dt = -\lambdayNy(t) +\lambdaxNx(t) dNz(t)/dt = -\lambdazNz(t) +\lambdayNy(t) The...
  12. U

    Radioactive decay of an isolated body

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  13. H

    Radioactive Decay: U234 & Th230 Half-Lives & Equal Atom Counts

    dHomework Statement the half life of U234 is 245.5 years. It decays by α emmission to Th230 whos half life is 75.38. there are 10^6 atoms of U234 and 0 atoms of Th230 at t=0. At what time will the number of atoms of each type be equal? the half life of U234 is 245.5 years and half life of...
  14. P

    Atomic Physics - Radioactive Decay and Stability

    Hi, Explain in terms of the number of nucleons and the forces between them, why argon-36 is stable and argon-39 is radioactive. My first doubt regards the number of nucleons. If a nucleon is the collective number of neutrons and protons, if we take carbon 12 for example, does it have 6 or...
  15. U

    How to Derive the Decay Equation for Radioactive Isotopes A -> B -> C?

    Homework Statement I learned that radio-decay is exponential; say if A decays to B with constant y1 and B decays to C with constant y2 and C is stable, N1 is nuclei in A while N2 is nuclei in B. N1 = N0e-y1(t) Homework Equations Then, I tried writing the decay equation for B, and hit...
  16. nomadreid

    Radioactive decay versus compound interest

    The fact that radioactive decay and continuous compound interest end up with the same formula (with the "rate" being negative in the former and positive in the latter) seems to me to be more a result of the ubiquity of the exponential function in solving differential equations than any common...
  17. N

    Radioactive decay as explained by Wikipedia

    I am wondering what any experts think about these Wikipedia explanations of radioactive decay. (Wiki asks for help improving this article, so somebody must recognize some issues.) Thanks. under "EXPLANATION": Huh?? Does this mean anything?? What does "activation energy"...
  18. U

    Solar sail using radioactive decay

    Could you make a solar sail that derives it's energy from the decay of a radioactive element such as plutonium, uranium, or palonium? I understand that such elements radiate in all directions but if you had a 1 kg sphere of it attached to a boon which was attached to a reflective sail (e.g...
  19. S

    Time Dilation's Effect on Radioactive Decay

    Does time dilation effect radioactive decay? For example, if I speed a radioactive atom up to near light speeds, will its decay slow? If so, could this be used to study atoms with a very short decay time?
  20. L

    Periodici of radioactive decay

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  21. C

    Radioactive Decay: Are stable elements really stable?

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  22. K

    Radioactive decay and half life?

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  23. K

    What does Activity mean in terms of radioactive decay?

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  24. J

    What causes radioactive decay?

    So... I know that decay occurs when the nucleus of an atom has an unstable proton-neutron configuration. My question is, at the instant that decay occurs, what triggers it? Is it quantum mechanical in nature? If so, why are half lives so consistent?
  25. B

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  26. M

    Better Model for Radioactive Decay

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  27. T

    Statistics of Radioactive Decay

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  28. S

    How Do You Calculate Total Alpha-Decays in Radium-226 Experiment?

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  29. A

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  30. R

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  31. R

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  32. A

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  33. M

    How Does Radioactive Decay Affect Mass in a Sample of 99mTc?

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  34. Q

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  35. P

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  36. P

    Complete Radioactive Decay Equations and Identify Types

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  37. P

    Solved: Radioactive Decay Equations, Identify Type of Decay

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  38. R

    Radioactive Decay: Mean Life Time & Decay Constant

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  39. sophiecentaur

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  40. V

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  41. V

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  42. S

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  43. R

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  44. B

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  45. B

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  46. L

    Radioactive Decay Calculations

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  47. J

    Radioactive Decay: Calculate % Decayed, Atoms Remaining, Half-Life

    Homework Statement A radioactive sample contains 3.25 1018 atoms of a nuclide that decays at a rate of 3.4 1013 disintegrations per 26 min. (a) What percentage of the nuclide will have decayed after 159 d? % (b) How many atoms of the nuclide will remain in the sample? atoms (c) What is...
  48. FeDeX_LaTeX

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  49. FeDeX_LaTeX

    Is Radioactive Decay Really Random?

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  50. B

    Solving a Radioactive Decay Problem: Na(t) and Nb(t)

    Homework Statement Consider a radiactive decay problem involving two types of nuclei, A and B, with populations Na(t) and Nb(t). Suppose that type A nuclei decay to form type B nuclei, which then also decay, according to differential equations:Homework Equations dNa/dt = - Na/Ta dNb/dt =...
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