Question:
What Forces Unstable Atoms To Radiate?
Technotron
2006-08-08 16:52:16 UTC
All unstable systems, no matter how unstable they are, REQUIRE an external disturbance to release their energy.

A Brick on top of a tall building can be said to be unstable, but the brick will NOT fall untill something has pushed the brick off the building.

Same thing for radioactive atoms. They do have an odd combination of nucleus, but WHAT is disturbing the nucleus at the time it is releasing it's radioactivity ?

Is there some sort of quantum fluctuation in the universe that upsets unstable atoms into releasing their radiactivity ?
Six answers:
Benjamin N
2006-08-08 17:33:59 UTC
This is a very deep question. The practical answer seems to be that "God" DOES play dice. You might say that there is an interaction term in the Hamiltonian of an unstable nucleus which links the bound nuclear wavefunction to a free state of a decay product plus a different nucleus. This is like saying that there are mites on the balanced brick which randomly tapdance across it, and when enough mites are on the unsupported side, over it goes...but we can measure the mites in principle, predict their motions, which we can't do to the quantum fluctuations. But the actual decay of a single nucleus is a completely unpredictable thing.
mrjeffy321
2006-08-08 17:22:00 UTC
Things can, and do, happen for no discernible reason in the quantum world....and when we start talking about subatomic particles like that, we begin to enter the relm of quantum physics.



Unstable, radio active, isotopes of atoms decay completely randomly, there is no way to know when, exactly, an atom will decay. We can, however, figure out an average rate of decay based on how long it takes for half of the substance to decay (half-life), but individual atom decaying is still random chance.
2006-08-08 17:06:05 UTC
The radiation is emitted by unstable atomic nuclei (see nucleus) as they attempt to become more stable. The main processes of radioactivity are alpha decay, beta decay, and gamma decay. In 1934 it was discovered that radioactivity could be induced in ordinary matter by artificial transmutation.

These types differ in velocity, in the way in which they are affected by a magnetic field, and in their ability to penetrate or pass through matter. Other, less common, types of radioactivity are electron capture (capture of one of the orbiting atomic electrons by the unstable nucleus) and positron emission—both forms of beta decay and both resulting in the change of a proton to a neutron within the nucleus—an internal conversion, in which an excited nucleus transfers energy directly to one of the atom's orbiting electrons and ejects it from the atom.

Alpha Radiation



Alpha rays have the least penetrating power, move at a slower velocity than the other types, and are deflected slightly by a magnetic field in a direction that indicates a positive charge. Alpha rays are nuclei of ordinary helium atoms (see alpha particle). Alpha decay reduces the atomic weight, or mass number, of a nucleus, while beta and gamma decay leave the mass number unchanged. Thus, the net effect of alpha radioactivity is to produce nuclei lighter than those of the original radioactive substance. For example, in the disintegration, or decay, of uranium-238 by the emission of alpha particles, radioactive thorium (formerly called ionium) is produced. The alpha decay reduces the atomic number of the nucleus by 2 and the mass number by 4:







Beta Radiation



Beta rays are more penetrating than alpha rays, move at a very high speed, and are deflected considerably by a magnetic field in a direction that indicates a negative charge; analysis shows that beta rays are high-speed electrons (see beta particle; electron). In beta decay a neutron within the nucleus changes to a proton, in the process emitting an electron and an antineutrino (the antiparticle of the neutrino, a neutral particle with a small mass). The electron is immediately ejected from the nucleus, and the net result is an increase of 1 in the atomic number of the nucleus but no change in the mass number. The thorium-234 produced above experiences two successive beta decays:







Gamma Radiation



Gamma rays have very great penetrating power and are not affected at all by a magnetic field. They move at the speed of light and have a very short wavelength (or high frequency); thus they are a type of electromagnetic radiation (see gamma radiation). Gamma rays result from the transition of nuclei from excited states (higher energy) to their ground state (lowest energy), and their production is analogous to the emission of ordinary light caused by transitions of electrons within the atom (see atom; spectrum). Gamma decay often accompanies alpha or beta decay and affects neither the atomic number nor the mass number of the nucleus.



Radioactive Decay



The nuclei of elements exhibiting radioactivity are unstable and are found to be undergoing continuous disintegration (i.e., gradual breakdown). The disintegration proceeds at a definite rate characteristic of the particular nucleus; that is, each radioactive isotope has a definite lifetime. However, the time of decay of an individual nucleus is unpredictable. The lifetime of a radioactive substance is not affected in any way by any physical or chemical conditions to which the substance may be subjected.
ET
2006-08-08 20:34:04 UTC
It is a decay of the atom. The nucleus is already unstable. Instead of an external force making it radiate, it is more like the atom radiating to make itself more stable.
sillivan
2016-12-11 14:58:44 UTC
It concluded that an atom is form of a watermelon with the purple section being the atom and the seed being the electrons embedded in it. It additionally concluded that the constructive charge is amassed interior the centre of the atom and there are various areas between the nucleus and electron as a results of fact of this many alpha debris handed in the process the gold foil. there replaced right into a million greater pt. i forgot,,, i did it 3 grades bak, happy to assist
Cirric
2006-08-08 17:53:30 UTC
Hi. I think you'll find that it is the "weak nuclear force".


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