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Types of Decay

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    SAL: Everything we've been
    dealing with so far in our
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    journey through chemistry has
    revolved around stability of
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    electrons and where electrons
    would rather
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    be in stable shells.
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    And like all things in life,
    if you explore the atom a
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    little further you'll realize
    that electrons are not the
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    only stuff that's going
    on in an atom.
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    That the nucleus itself has some
    interactions, or has some
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    instability, that needs to
    be relieved in some way.
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    That's what we'll talk
    a little bit
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    about in this video.
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    And actually the mechanics of
    it are well out of the scope
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    of a first-year chemistry
    course, but it's good to at
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    least know that it occurs.
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    And one day when we study the
    strong nuclear force, and
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    quantum physics, and all the
    like, then we can start
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    talking about exactly why these
    protons and neutrons,
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    and their constituent quarks
    are interacting
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    the way they do.
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    But with that said, let's
    at least think about the
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    different types of ways that a
    nucleus can essentially decay.
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    So let's say I have a
    bunch of protons.
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    I'll just draw a couple here.
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    Some protons there, and I'll
    draw some neutrons.
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    And I'll draw them in
    a neutral-ish color.
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    Maybe let me see, like a
    grayish would be good.
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    So let me just draw some
    neutrons here.
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    How many protons do I have?
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    I have 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8.
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    I'll do 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
    6, 7, 8, 9 neutrons.
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    And so let's say this is the
    nucleus of our atom.
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    And remember-- and this is, you
    know, in the very first
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    video I made about the atom--
    the nucleus, if you actually
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    were to draw an actual atom--
    and it's actually very hard to
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    drawn an atom because it has
    no well-defined boundaries.
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    The electron really could be,
    you know, at any given moment,
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    it could be anywhere.
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    But if you were to say, OK,
    where is 90% of the time the
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    electron is going to be in?
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    You'd say, that's the radius,
    or that's the
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    diameter of our atom.
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    We learned in that very first
    video that the nucleus is
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    almost an infinitesimal portion
    of the volume of this
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    sphere where the electron
    will be 90% of the time.
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    And the neat takeaway there
    was that, well, most of
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    whatever we look at in life
    is just open free space.
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    All of this is just
    open space.
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    But I just want to repeat
    that because that little
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    infinitesimal spot that we
    talked about before, where
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    even though it's a very small
    part of the fraction of the
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    volume of an atom-- it's
    actually almost all of its
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    mass-- that's what I'm zooming
    out to this point here.
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    These aren't atoms, these
    aren't electrons.
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    We're zoomed into the nucleus.
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    And so it turns out that
    sometimes the nucleus is a
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    little bit unstable, and it
    wants to get to a more stable
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    configuration.
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    We're not going to go into the
    mechanics of exactly what
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    defines an unstable nucleus
    and all that.
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    But in order to get into a
    more unstable nucleus,
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    sometimes it emits what's called
    an alpha particle, or
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    this is called alpha decay.
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    Alpha decay.
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    And it emits an alpha particle,
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    which sounds very fancy.
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    It's just a collection of
    neutrons and protons.
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    So an alpha particle is two
    neutrons and two protons.
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    So maybe these guys, they just
    didn't feel like they'd fit in
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    just right, so they're a
    collection right here.
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    And they get emitted.
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    They leave the nucleus.
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    So let's just think what
    happens to an atom when
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    something like that happens.
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    So let's just say I have some
    random element, I'll just call
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    it element E.
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    Let's say it has p, protons.
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    Actually let me do it in the
    color of my protons.
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    It has p, protons.
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    And then it has its atomic mass
    number, is the number of
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    protons plus the number
    of neutrons.
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    And do the neutrons
    in gray, right?
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    So when it experiences
    alpha decay, what
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    happens to the element?
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    Well, its protons are going
    to decrease by two.
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    So its protons are going
    to be p minus 2.
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    And then its neutrons are also
    going to decrease by two.
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    So its mass number's going
    to decrease by four.
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    So up here you'll have p minus
    2, plus our neutrons minus 2,
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    so we're going to
    have minus 4.
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    So your mass is going to
    decrease by four, and you're
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    actually going to turn
    to a new element.
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    Remember, your elements
    were defined by
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    the number of protons.
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    So in this alpha decay, when
    you're losing two neutrons and
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    two protons, but especially the
    protons are going to make
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    you into a different element.
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    So if we call this element 1,
    I'm just going to call it,
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    we're going to be a different
    element now, element 2.
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    And if you think about what's
    generated, we're emitting
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    something that has two protons,
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    and it has two neutrons.
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    So that its mass is going to be
    the mass of the two protons
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    and two neutrons.
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    So what are we emitting?
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    We're emitting something that
    has a mass of four.
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    So if you look at, what is two
    protons and two neutrons?
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    I actually don't have the
    periodic table on my
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    [? head. ?]
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    I forgot to cut and paste
    it before this video.
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    But it doesn't take you long on
    the periodic table to find
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    an element that has two protons,
    and that's helium.
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    It actually has an atomic
    mass of four.
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    So this is actually a helium
    nucleus that gets emitted with
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    alpha decay.
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    This is actually a
    helium nucleus.
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    And because it's a helium
    nucleus and it has no
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    electrons to bounce off its two
    protons, this would be a
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    helium ion.
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    So essentially it has
    no electrons.
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    It has two protons so it
    has a plus 2 charge.
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    So an alpha particle is really
    just a helium ion, a plus 2
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    charged helium ion that is
    spontaneously emitted by a
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    nucleus just to get to
    a more stable state.
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    Now that's one type of decay.
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    Let's explore the other ones.
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    So let me draw another
    nucleus here.
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    I'll draw some neutrons.
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    I'll just draw some protons.
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    So it turns out sometimes that
    a neutron doesn't feel
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    comfortable with itself.
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    It looks at what the protons do
    on a daily basis and says,
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    you know what?
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    For some reason when I look into
    my heart, I feel like I
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    really should be a proton.
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    If I were a proton, the entire
    nucleus would be a little bit
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    more stable.
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    And so what it does is, to
    become a proton-- remember, a
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    neutron has neutral charge.
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    So what it does is, it
    emits an electron.
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    And I know you're saying, Sal,
    you know, that's crazy, I
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    didn't even know neutrons
    had electrons in
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    them, and all of that.
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    And I agree with you.
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    It is crazy.
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    And one day we'll study
    all of what exists
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    inside of the nucleus.
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    But let's just say that it
    can emit an electron.
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    So this emits an electron.
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    And we signify that with its--
    roughly its mass is zero.
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    We know an electron really
    doesn't have a zero mass, but
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    we're talking about
    atomic mass units.
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    If the proton is one, an
    electron is 1/1,836 of that.
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    So we just round it.
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    We say it has a mass of zero.
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    Its mass really isn't zero.
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    And its charge is minus 1.
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    It's atomic, you can kind
    of say its atomic
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    number's minus 1.
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    So it emits an electron.
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    And by emitting an electron,
    instead of being neutral, now
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    it turns into a proton.
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    And so this is called
    beta decay.
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    And a beta particle is really
    just that emitted electron.
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    So let's go back to our little
    case of an element.
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    It has some number of protons,
    and then it has
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    some number of neutrons.
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    So you have the protons and
    the neutrons, then you get
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    your mass number.
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    When it experiences beta
    decay, what happens?
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    Well, are the protons changed?
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    Sure, we have one more proton
    than we had before.
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    Because our neutron
    changed into one.
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    So now our protons are plus 1.
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    Has our mass number changed?
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    Well let's see.
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    The neutrons goes down
    by one but your
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    protons go up to by one.
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    So your mass number
    will not change.
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    So it's still going
    to be p plus N.
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    so your mass stays the same,
    unlike the situation with
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    alpha decay, but your
    element changes.
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    Your number of protons
    changes.
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    So now, once again, you're
    dealing with a new element in
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    beta decay.
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    Now, let's say we have
    the other situation.
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    Let's say we have a situation
    where one of these protons
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    looks at the neutrons and
    says, you know what?
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    I see how they live.
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    It's very appealing to me.
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    I think I would fit in better,
    and our community of particles
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    within the nucleus would
    be happier if
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    I too were a neutron.
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    We'd all be in a more
    stable condition.
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    So what they do is, that little
    uncomfortable proton
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    has some probability of
    emitting-- and now this is a
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    new idea to you-- a positron,
    not a proton.
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    It emits a positron.
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    And what's a positron?
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    It's something that
    has the exact
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    same mass as an electron.
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    So it's 1/1836 of the
    mass of a proton.
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    But we just write a zero there
    because in atomic mass units
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    it's pretty close to zero.
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    But it has a positive charge.
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    And it's a little confusing,
    because they'll
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    still write e there.
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    Whenever I see an e, I
    think an electron.
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    But no, they say e because it's
    kind of like the same
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    type of particle, but instead
    of having a negative charge,
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    it has a positive charge.
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    This is a positron.
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    And now we're starting to get
    kind of exotic with the types
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    of particles and stuff
    we're dealing with.
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    But this does happen.
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    And if you have a proton that
    emits this particle, that
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    pretty much had all of its
    positive charge going with it,
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    this proton turns
    into a neutron.
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    And that is called positron
    emission.
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    Positron emission is usually
    pretty easy to figure out what
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    it is, because they call
    it positron emission.
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    So if we start with the same E,
    it has a certain number of
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    protons, and a certain
    number of neutrons.
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    What's the new element
    going to be?
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    Well it's going to lose
    a proton. p minus 1.
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    And that's going to be turned
    into a neutron.
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    So p is going to
    go down by one.
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    N is going to go up by one.
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    So that the mass of the whole
    atom isn't going to change.
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    So it's going to be p plus N.
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    But we're still going to have
    a different element, right?
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    When we had beta decay,
    we increased
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    the number of protons.
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    So we went, kind of, to the
    right in the periodic table or
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    we increased our, well,
    you get the idea.
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    When we do positron emission,
    we decreased
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    our number of protons.
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    And actually I should
    write that here in
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    both of these reactions.
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    So this is the positron
    emission, and I'm left over
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    with one positron.
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    And in our beta decay, I'm left
    over with one electron.
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    They're written the
    exact same way.
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    You know this is an electron
    because it's a minus 1 charge.
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    You know this is a positron
    because it
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    has a plus 1 charge.
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    Now there's one last
    type of decay that
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    you should know about.
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    But it doesn't change the number
    of protons or neutrons
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    in a nucleus.
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    But it just releases a ton of
    energy, or sometimes, you
  • 11:47 - 11:48
    know, a high-energy proton.
  • 11:48 - 11:50
    And that's called gamma decay.
  • 11:50 - 11:53
    And gamma decay means that these
    guys just reconfigure
  • 11:53 - 11:53
    themselves.
  • 11:53 - 11:54
    Maybe they get a little
    bit closer.
  • 11:54 - 11:58
    And by doing that they release
    energy in the form of a very
  • 11:58 - 12:03
    high wavelength electromagnetic
    wave. Which is
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    essentially a gamma, you could
    either call it a gamma
  • 12:06 - 12:08
    particle or gamma ray.
  • 12:08 - 12:09
    And it's very high energy.
  • 12:09 - 12:12
    Gamma rays are something you
    don't want to be around.
  • 12:12 - 12:15
    They're very likely
    to maybe kill you.
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    Everything we did, I've said
    is a little theoretical.
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    Let's do some actual problems,
    and figure out what type of
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    decay we're dealing with.
  • 12:22 - 12:24
    So here I have 7-beryllium
    where seven
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    is its atomic mass.
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    And I have it being converted
    to 7-lithium So
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    what's going on here?
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    My beryllium, my nuclear mass
    is staying the same, but I'm
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    going from four protons
    to three protons.
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    So I'm reducing my number
    of protons.
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    My overall mass hasn't
    changed.
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    So it's definitely
    not alpha decay.
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    Alpha decay was, you know,
    you're releasing a whole
  • 12:51 - 12:53
    helium from the nucleus.
  • 12:53 - 12:55
    So what am I releasing?
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    I'm kind of releasing one
    positive charge, or I'm
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    releasing a positron.
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    And actually I have this
    here in this equation.
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    This is a positron.
  • 13:04 - 13:07
    So this type of decay of
    7-beryllium to 7-lithium is
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    positron emission.
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    Fair enough.
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    Now let's look at
    the next one.
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    We have uranium-238 decaying
    to thorium-234.
  • 13:20 - 13:25
    And we see that the atomic mass
    is decreasing by 4, minus
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    4, and you see that your atomic
    numbers decrease, or
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    your protons are decreasing,
    by 2.
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    So you must be releasing,
    essentially, something that
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    has an atomic mass of four,
    and a atomic number
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    of two, or a helium.
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    So this is alpha decay.
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    So this right here is
    an alpha particle.
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    And this is an example
    of alpha decay.
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    Now you're probably saying, hey
    Sal, wait, something weird
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    is happening here.
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    Because if I just go from 92
    protons to 90 protons, I still
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    have my 92 electrons out here.
  • 13:59 - 14:03
    So wouldn't I now have
    a minus 2 charge?
  • 14:03 - 14:08
    And even better, this helium I'm
    releasing, it doesn't have
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    any electrons with it.
  • 14:09 - 14:10
    It's just a helium nucleus.
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    So doesn't that have
    a plus 2 charge?
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    And if you said that, you would
    be absolutely correct.
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    But the reality is that right
    when this decay happens, this
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    thorium, it has no reason
    to hold on to those two
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    electrons, so those two
    electrons disappear and
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    thorium becomes neutral again.
  • 14:27 - 14:30
    And this helium, likewise,
    it is very quick.
  • 14:30 - 14:33
    It really wants two electrons
    to get stable, so it's very
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    quick to grab two electrons out
    of wherever it's bumping
  • 14:37 - 14:38
    into, and so that
    becomes stable.
  • 14:38 - 14:40
    So you could write
    it either way.
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    Now let's do another one.
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    So here I have iodine.
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    Let's see what's happening.
  • 14:47 - 14:51
    My mass is not changing.
  • 14:51 - 14:54
    So I must just have protons
    turning into neutrons or
  • 14:54 - 14:56
    neutrons turning into protons.
  • 14:56 - 14:59
    And I see here that I
    have 53 protons, and
  • 14:59 - 15:01
    now I have 54 protons.
  • 15:01 - 15:04
    So a neutron must have
    turned into a proton.
  • 15:04 - 15:07
    A neutron must have
    gone to a proton.
  • 15:07 - 15:09
    And the way that a neutron
    goes to a proton is by
  • 15:09 - 15:12
    releasing an electron.
  • 15:12 - 15:13
    And we see that in this
    reaction right here.
  • 15:13 - 15:17
    An electron has been released.
  • 15:17 - 15:19
    And so this is beta decay.
  • 15:19 - 15:20
    This is a beta particle.
  • 15:26 - 15:27
    And that same logic holds.
  • 15:27 - 15:33
    You're like, hey wait, I just
    went from 53 to 54 protons.
  • 15:33 - 15:34
    Now that I have this extra
    proton, won't I have a
  • 15:34 - 15:36
    positive charge here?
  • 15:36 - 15:36
    Well you would.
  • 15:36 - 15:41
    But very quickly this might--
    probably won't get these exact
  • 15:41 - 15:43
    electrons, there's so many
    electrons running around-- but
  • 15:43 - 15:46
    it'll grab some electrons from
    some place to get stable, and
  • 15:46 - 15:47
    then it'll be stable again.
  • 15:47 - 15:49
    But you're completely right in
    thinking, hey, wouldn't it be
  • 15:49 - 15:52
    an ion for some small
    amount of time?
  • 15:52 - 15:53
    Now let's do one more.
  • 15:53 - 15:57
    So we have to 222-radon-- it
    has atomic number of 86--
  • 15:57 - 16:02
    going to 218-polonium, with
    atomic number of 84.
  • 16:02 - 16:04
    And this actually is an
    interesting aside.
  • 16:04 - 16:08
    Polonium is named after Poland,
    because Marie Curie,
  • 16:08 - 16:11
    she-- At the time Poland, this
    was at the turn of the last
  • 16:11 - 16:15
    century, around the end of the
    1800's, Poland didn't exist as
  • 16:15 - 16:16
    a separate country.
  • 16:16 - 16:20
    It was split between Prussia,
    Russia, and Austria.
  • 16:20 - 16:22
    And they really wanted let
    people know that, hey, you
  • 16:22 - 16:24
    know, we think we're
    one people.
  • 16:24 - 16:27
    So they discovered that when,
    you know, radon decayed it
  • 16:27 - 16:28
    formed this element.
  • 16:28 - 16:31
    And they named it after their
    motherland, after Poland.
  • 16:31 - 16:34
    It's the privileges of
    discovering new elements.
  • 16:34 - 16:35
    But anyway, back
    to the problem.
  • 16:35 - 16:36
    So what happened?
  • 16:36 - 16:39
    Our atomic mass went
    down by four.
  • 16:39 - 16:41
    Our atomic number went
    down by two.
  • 16:41 - 16:45
    Once again, we must have
    released a helium particle.
  • 16:45 - 16:47
    A helium nucleus, something
    that has an atomic mass of
  • 16:47 - 16:51
    four, and an atomic
    number of two.
  • 16:51 - 16:52
    And so there we are.
  • 16:52 - 16:56
    So this is alpha decay.
  • 16:56 - 16:58
    We could write this as
    a helium nucleus.
  • 16:58 - 16:59
    So it has no electrons.
  • 16:59 - 17:01
    We could even say immediately
    that this would have a
  • 17:01 - 17:03
    negative charge, but
    then it loses
Title:
Types of Decay
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
17:03
Fran Ontanaya edited English subtitles for Types of Decay
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