(Redirected from Radioactive): ''"Radioactive" and "Radioactivity" redirect here. For other uses see
Radioactive (disambiguation)''.
: ''For decay rate in a more general context see
Particle decay''.
'Radioactive decay' is the process in which an unstable ''
atomic nucleus '' loses energy by emitting
radiation in the form of
particles or
electromagnetic waves. This decay, or loss of energy, results in an atom of one type, called the ''parent nuclide'' transforming to an atom of a different type, called the ''daughter nuclide''. For example: a carbon-14 atom (the "parent") emits radiation and transforms to a nitrogen-14 atom (the "daughter.") This is a
random process on the atomic level, in that it is impossible to predict when a 'particular' atom will decay, but given a large number of similar atoms, the decay rate, on average, is predictable.
The
SI unit of radioactive decay (the phenomenon of natural and artificial radioactivity) is the
becquerel (Bq). One Bq is defined as one transformation (or decay) per second. Since any reasonably-sized sample of radioactive material contains many atoms, a Bq is a tiny measure of activity; amounts on the order of TBq (terabecquerel) or GBq (gigabecquerel) are commonly used. Another unit of (radio)activity is the
curie, Ci, which was originally defined as the activity of one gram of pure
radium, isotope Ra-226. At present it is equal (by definition) to the activity of any radionuclide decaying with a disintegration rate of 3.7 × 10
10 Bq. The use of Ci is presently discouraged by SI.
Explanation
The
neutrons and
protons that constitute nuclei, as well as other particles that may approach them, are governed by several interactions. The
strong nuclear force, not observed at the familiar
macroscopic scale, is the most powerful force over subatomic distances. The
electrostatic force is also significant, while the
weak nuclear force is responsible for
Beta decay.
The interplay of these forces is simple. Some configurations of the particles in a nucleus have the property that, should they shift ever so slightly, the particles could fall into a lower-
energy arrangement (with the extra energy moving elsewhere). One might draw an analogy with a snowfield on a mountain: while
friction between the snow crystals can support the snow's weight, the system is inherently unstable with regards to a lower-potential-energy state, and a disturbance may facilitate the path to a greater entropy state (i.e., towards the ground state where heat will be produced, and thus total energy is distributed over a larger number of quantum states). Thus, an
avalanche results. The 'total' energy does not change in this process, but because of entropy effects, avalanches only happen in one direction, and the end of this direction, which is dictated by the largest number of chance-mediated ways to distribute available energy, is what we commonly refer to as the "ground state."
Such a collapse (a ''decay event'') requires a specific
activation energy. In the case of a snow avalanche, this energy classically comes as a disturbance from outside the system, although such disturbances can be arbitrarily small. In the case of an excited
atomic nucleus, the arbitrarily small disturbance comes from quantum
vacuum fluctuations. A nucleus (or any excited system in quantum mechanics) is unstable, and can thus ''spontaneously stabilize'' to a less-excited system. This process is driven by entropy considerations: the energy does not change, but at the end of the process, the total energy is more diffused in spacial volume. The resulting transformation alters the structure of the nucleus. Such a reaction is thus a
nuclear reaction, in contrast to
chemical reactions, which also are driven by entropy, but which involve changes in the arrangement of the outer
electrons of atoms, rather than their nuclei.
Some
nuclear reactions 'do' involve external sources of energy, in the form of collisions with outside particles. However, these are not considered ''decay''. Rather, they are examples of induced
nuclear reactions. Nuclear
fission and
fusion are common types of induced nuclear reactions.
Discovery
Radioactivity was first discovered in 1896 by the
French scientist
Henri Becquerel while working on
phosphorescent materials. These materials glow in the dark after exposure to light, and he thought that the glow produced in
cathode ray tubes by
X-rays might somehow be connected with phosphorescence. So he tried wrapping a photographic plate in black paper and placing various phosphorescent
minerals on it. All results were negative until he tried using
uranium salts. The result with these compounds was a deep blackening of the plate.
However, it soon became clear that the blackening of the plate had nothing to do with phosphorescence because the plate blackened when the mineral was kept in the dark. Also non-phosphorescent salts of uranium and even metallic uranium blackened the plate. Clearly there was some new form of radiation that could pass through paper that was causing the plate to blacken.

Alpha particles may be completely stopped by a sheet of paper, beta particles by aluminum shielding. Gamma rays, however, can only be reduced by much more substantial obstacles, such as a very thick piece of lead.
At first it seemed that the new radiation was similar to the then recently discovered X-rays. However further research by Becquerel,
Marie Curie,
Pierre Curie,
Ernest Rutherford and others discovered that radioactivity was significantly more complicated. Different types of decay can occur, but Rutherford was the first to realize that they all occur with the same mathematical approximately exponential formula (see below).
As for types of radioactive radiation, it was found that an
electric or
magnetic field could split such emissions into three types of beams. For lack of better terms, the rays were given the
alphabetic names
alpha,
beta, and
gamma, names they still hold today. It was immediately obvious from the direction of
electromagnetic forces that
alpha rays carried a positive charge,
beta rays carried a negative charge, and
gamma rays were neutral. From the magnitude of deflection, it was also clear that
alpha particles were much more massive than
beta particles. Passing alpha rays through a thin glass membrane and trapping them in a
discharge tube allowed researchers to study the
emission spectrum of the resulting gas, and ultimately prove that alpha particles are in fact
helium nuclei. Other experiments showed the similarity between beta radiation and
cathode rays; they are both streams of
electrons, and between gamma radiation and X-rays, which are both high energy
electromagnetic radiation.
Although alpha, beta, and gamma are most common, other types of decay were eventually discovered. Shortly after discovery of the
neutron in 1932, it was discovered by
Enrico Fermi that certain rare decay reactions give rise to neutrons as a decay particle. Isolated
proton emission was also eventually observed in some elements. Shortly after the discovery of the
positron in cosmic ray products, it was realized that the same process that operates in classical
beta decay can also produce positrons (
positron emission), analogously to negative electrons. Each of the two types of beta decay acts to move a nucleus toward a ratio of neutrons and protons which has the least energy for the combination. Finally, in a phenomenon called
cluster decay, specific combinations of neutrons and protons other than alpha particles were found to occasionally spontaneously be emitted from atoms.
Still other types of radioactive decay were found which emit previously seen particles, but by different mechanisms. An example is
internal conversion, which results in electron and sometimes high energy photon emission, even though it involves neither beta nor gamma decay.
The early researchers also discovered that many other
chemical elements besides uranium have
radioactive isotopes. A systematic search for the total radioactivity in uranium ores also guided
Marie Curie to isolate a new element
polonium and to separate a new element
radium from
barium; the two elements' chemical similarity would otherwise have made them difficult to distinguish.
The dangers of radioactivity and of radiation were not immediately recognized. Acute effects of radiation were first observed in the use of X-rays when the Serbo-Croatian-American electric engineer
Nikola Tesla intentionally subjected his fingers to X-rays in 1896. He published his observations concerning the burns that developed, though he attributed them to ozone rather than to the X-rays. Fortunately his injuries healed later.
The genetic effects of radiation, including the effects on cancer risk, were recognized much later. It was only in 1927 that
Hermann Joseph Muller published his research that showed the genetic effects. In 1946 he was awarded the
Nobel prize for his findings.
Before the biological effects of radiation were known, many physicians and corporations had begun marketing radioactive substances as
patent medicine and
Radioactive quackery; particularly alarming examples were radium
enema treatments, and radium-containing waters to be drunk as tonics.
Marie Curie spoke out against this sort of treatment, warning that the effects of radiation on the human body were not well understood (Curie later died from
aplastic anemia assumed due to her own work with radium, but later examination of her bones showed that she had been a careful laboratory worker and had a low burden of radium; a better candidate for her disease was her long exposure to unshielded X-ray tubes while a volunteer medical worker in WW I). By the 1930s, after a number of cases of bone-necrosis and death in enthusiasts, radium-containing medical products had nearly vanished from the market.
Modes of decay
Radionuclides can undergo a number of different reactions. These are summarized in the following table. A nucleus with positive charge (atomic number) ''Z'' and atomic weight ''A'' is represented as (''A'', ''Z'').
| Mode of decay | Participating particles | Daughter nucleus |
|---|
| 'Decays with emission of nucleons:' |
| Alpha decay | An alpha particle (''A''=4, ''Z''=2) emitted from nucleus | (''A''-4, ''Z''-2) |
| Proton emission | A proton ejected from nucleus | (''A''-1, ''Z''-1) |
| Neutron emission | A neutron ejected from nucleus | (''A''-1, ''Z'') |
| Double proton emission | Two protons ejected from nucleus simultaneously | (''A''-2, ''Z''-2) |
| Spontaneous fission | Nucleus disintegrates into two or more smaller nuclei and other particles | - |
| Cluster decay | Nucleus emits a specific type of smaller nucleus (''A''1, ''Z''1) larger than an alpha particle | (''A''-''A''1, ''Z''-''Z''1) + (''A''1,''Z''1) |
| 'Different modes of beta decay:' | ||
| Beta-Negative decay | A nucleus emits an electron and an antineutrino | (''A'', ''Z''+1) |
| Positron emission, also Beta-Positive decay | A nucleus emits a positron and a neutrino | (''A'', ''Z''-1) |
| Electron capture | A nucleus captures an orbiting electron and emits a neutrino - The daughter nucleus is left in an excited and unstable state | (''A'', ''Z''-1) |
| Double beta decay | A nucleus emits two electrons and two antineutrinos | (''A'', ''Z''+2) |
| Double electron capture | A nucleus absorbs two orbital electrons and emits two neutrinos - The daughter nucleus is left in an excited and unstable state | (''A'', ''Z''-2) |
| Electron capture with positron emission | A nucleus absorbs one orbital electron, emits one positron and two neutrinos | (''A'', ''Z''-2) |
| Double positron emission | A nucleus emits two positrons and two neutrinos | (''A'', ''Z''-2) |
| 'Transitions between states of the same nucleus: | ||
| Gamma decay | Excited nucleus releases a high-energy photon (gamma ray) | (''A'', ''Z'') |
| Internal conversion | Excited nucleus transfers energy to an orbital electron and it is ejected from the atom | (''A'', ''Z'') |
Radioactive decay results in a reduction of summed rest
mass, which is
converted to energy (the ''disintegration energy'') according to the formula
. This energy is released as kinetic energy of the emitted particles. The energy remains associated with a measure of mass of the decay system
invariant mass, inasmuch the kinetic energy of emitted particles contributes also to the total
invariant mass of systems. Thus, the sum of rest masses of particles is not conserved in decay, but the ''system'' mass or system
invariant mass (as also system total energy) is conserved.
Decay chains and multiple modes
The daughter nuclide of a decay event is usually also unstable, sometimes even more unstable than the parent. If this is the case, it will proceed to decay again. A sequence of several decay events, producing in the end a stable nuclide, is a ''
decay chain''.
Many radionuclides have several different observed modes of decay.
Bismuth-212, for example, has three. Thus a given nuclide may lead to several different decay chains.
Of the commonly occurring forms of radioactive decay, the only one that changes the number of aggregate protons and neutrons (''
nucleons'') contained in the nucleus is alpha emission, which reduces it by four. Thus, the number of nucleons
modulo 4 is preserved across any decay chain.
Occurrence and applications
According to the
Big Bang theory, radioactive isotopes of the lightest elements (
H,
He, and traces of
Li) were produced very shortly after the emergence of the universe. However, these nuclides are so highly unstable that virtually none of them have survived to today. Most radioactive nuclei are therefore relatively young, having formed in
stars (particularly
supernovae) and during ongoing interactions between stable isotopes and energetic particles. For example,
carbon-14, a radioactive nuclide with a half-life of only 5730 years, is constantly produced in Earth's upper atmosphere due to interactions between cosmic rays and nitrogen.
Radioactive decay has been put to use in the technique of
radioisotopic labeling, used to track the passage of a chemical substance through a complex system (such as a living
organism). A sample of the substance is synthesized with a high concentration of unstable atoms. The presence of the substance in one or another part of the system is determined by detecting the locations of decay events.
On the premise that radioactive decay is truly
random (rather than merely
chaotic), it has been used in
hardware random-number generators. Because the process is not thought to vary significantly in mechanism over time, it is also a valuable tool in estimating the absolute ages of certain materials. For geological materials, the radioisotopes and certain of their decay products become trapped when a rock solidifies, and can then later be used (subject to many well-known qualifications) to estimate the date of the solidification. These include checking the results of several simultaneous processes and their products against each other, within the same sample.
Radioactive decay rates
The 'decay rate', or 'activity', of a radioactive substance are characterized by:
''Constant'' quantities:
:
★
half life — symbol
— the time for half of a substance to decay.
:
★
mean lifetime — symbol
— the average lifetime of any given particle.
:
★
decay constant — symbol
— the inverse of the mean lifetime.
::(Note that although these are constants, they are associated with statistically random behavior of substances, and predictions using these constants are less accurate for small number of atoms.)
''Time-variable'' quantities:
:
★ 'Total activity' — symbol
— number of decays an object undergoes per second.
:
★ 'Number of particles' — symbol
— the total number of particles in the sample.
:
★ 'Specific activity' — symbol
— number of decays per second per amount of substance. The "''amount of substance''" can be the unit of either mass or volume.)
These are related as follows:
:
:
:
:::where
::::
is the initial amount of active substance — substance that has the same percentage of unstable particles as when the substance was formed.
Activity measurements
The units in which activities are measured are:
becquerel (symbol ''Bq'') = number of disintegrations per second;
curie (Ci) = 3.7 × 10
10 disintegrations per second. Low activities are also measured in 'disintegrations per minute' (dpm).
Decay timing
As discussed above, the decay of an unstable nucleus is entirely random and it is impossible to predict when a particular atom will decay. However, it is equally likely to decay at any time. Therefore, given a sample of a particular radioisotope, the number of decay events –''dN'' expected to occur in a small interval of time ''dt'' is proportional to the number of atoms present. If ''N'' is the number of atoms, then the probability of decay (– ''dN''/''N'') is proportional to ''dt'':
:
Particular radionuclides decay at different rates, each having its own decay constant (
λ). The negative sign indicates that N decreases with each decay event. The solution to this first-order
differential equation is the following
function:
:
This function represents
exponential decay. It is only an approximate solution, for two reasons. Firstly, the
exponential function is
continuous, but the physical quantity ''N'' can only take
non-negative integer values. Secondly, because it describes a random process, it is only statistically true. However, in most common cases, ''N'' is a very large number and the function is a good approximation.
In addition to the decay constant, radioactive decay is sometimes characterized by the
mean lifetime. Each atom "lives" for a finite amount of time before it decays, and the mean lifetime is the
arithmetic mean of all the atoms' lifetimes. It is represented by the symbol
, and is related to the decay constant as follows:
:
A more commonly used parameter is the
half-life. Given a sample of a particular radionuclide, the half-life is the time taken for half the radionuclide's atoms to decay. The half life is related to the decay constant as follows:
:
This relationship between the half-life and the decay constant shows that highly radioactive substances are quickly spent, while those that radiate weakly endure longer. Half-lives of known radionuclides vary widely, from more than
1019 years (such as for very nearly stable nuclides, e.g.
209Bi), to
10-23 seconds for highly unstable ones.
References
★
"Radioactivity", Encyclopædia Britannica. 2006. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 18 Dec. 2006
See also
★
Nuclear pharmacy
★
Nuclear physics
★
Radioactivity in biology
★
Poisson process
★
Radiation
★
Radiation therapy
★
Radioactive contamination
★
Radiometric dating
★
Actinides in the environment
★
Half-life
★
Fallout shelter
★
Particle decay
External links
★
General information
★
General information, with emphasis on different modes
★
Some numerical calculations based on the Uranium-232 decay chain
★
Nomenclature of nuclear chemistry
★
Some theoretical questions of nuclear stability
★
Decay heat rate|quantity calculation
★
Specific activity and related topics.
★
The Lund/LBNL Nuclear Data Search - Contains tabulated information on radioactive decay types and energies.