4th Week: Decays, Tunneling and Cross Sections B
Nuclear Decays
Nuclear decay occurs when an atom changes the composition of its nucleus. There are many different kinds of reactions. Some occur by an atom ejecting particles from its nucleus or when the nucleons change type.
Alpha Decay
Alpha decay occurs when the parent nucleus ejects an alpha particle (a helium-4 nucleus) and a daughter nucleus is left. This looks like:
Beta Decay
This is a very important process that occurs in stellar burning in part because it reduces the number of electrons available in the plasma and also because the neutrinos can take out some of the energy generated in the process. The most common weak interaction processes in nuclear beta decays are:
decay or electron emission
decay or positron emission
electron capture
neutrino (antineutrino) capture
Notice how these processes conserve the mass number but change Z and N. These reactions occur on long time scales but do not need high energy to occur. They also are very slow compared to electromagnetic reactions.
Electron Capture
This decay occurs when an electron enters the nucleus of an atom. It then reacts with a proton to form a neutron and an electron neutrino.
Reaction Nomenclature
When speaking of reactions it is nice to use the same language. Here is a generic reaction:
where:
- A is the "target" nucleus
- B is the "incoming projectile"
- C is the "outgoing particle"
- D is the "residual" nucleus
For example: means that a proton is captured by a Carbon-12 nucleus forming a Nitrogen-13 nucleus and an ejected a gamma ray.
Cross Section
The cross section is a quantitative measurement of the probability of a reaction to occur. Is defined by
The relation of the total cross section and the tunneling probability is given by
Effects of Resonances on Cross Section
Breit Wigner Cross Section
The effect of a resonance state on the cross section of a particular nuclear reaction can be determined via the Breit-Wigner cross section: