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k and t final review set
final 100
74
Other
Not Applicable
12/02/2016

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Term
What is a newton
Definition
The SI derived unit of force.
Term
what is a joule
Definition
SI unit of work. One joule of work is performed when a force of one newton is exerted through a distance of one meter
Term
How is work related to energy
Definition
Energy is the capacity to do work
Term
On the periodic table, what are rows called what are columns or vertical sections called
Definition
Rows are called periods and columns are called groups or families
Term
What are the four forms of energy
Definition
Kinetic, Potential, Thermal, Chemical.
Term
Define work
Definition
A force acting through a distance
Term
How many elements are there
Definition
118
Term
What is radioactivity
Definition
property of certain nuclides to spontaneously emit radiation
Term
What is radioactive decay
Definition
The process by which nucleus spontaneously disintegrates or transformed by one or more discrete energy steps until a stable state is reached
Term
What is the diameter of an atom
Definition
1 angstrong or 10^-10
Term
What is an AMU
Definition
the total masses of the protons neutrons and electrons, and is based on carbon 12 it is also used to calculate the mass defect, so that the binding energy can also be calculated
Term
Define Isotope
Definition
same atomic number but different mass number
Term
Define Isobars
Definition
same mass number but different atomic number
Term
Define nucleon
Definition
protons and neutrons in the nucleus
Term
What is an alpha particle and where do they come from
Definition
a charged particle that originates in the nucleus. it consists of 2 protons and 2 neutrons. It has a plus 2 charge and 4-5 MeV. with alpha decay the daughter will have a decrease in amass of 4. and atomic number by 2. mostly seen in heavy nuclides
Term
what is beta and where do they come from
Definition
they are a charged particle originating in the nucleus. they equal in mass and charge to an electron and are fission products.
Term
what is a gamma ray
Definition
electromagnetic radiation that originates in the nucleus. photon energy of 3 MeC range. usually seen in particle emission. no mass or charge and travels at speed of light. It interacts with atoms to produce ionization
Term
How do gamma rays differ from X-rays
Definition
Xrays originate outside the nucleus and the gamma originates from inside the nucleus
Term
what is a half life.
Definition
by a given time one of the the atoms of a given isotope has be transformed or decay
Term
describe 3 photons interactions processes and the energy levels at which they occur
Definition
Photoelectric effect: all or none energy loss. photon gibes all it energy to orbital electron this is in the form of kinetic energy. <1MeV
Compton scatter: partial energy loss when only part of the energy transferred to an eleectron. Photon energies 200Kev to 5 MeV
Pair Production:All energy is converted to mass. impossible unless gamma ray has an energy level is greater than than 1.022 MeV. Positive particle goes on to encounter an anti particle and they both are annihilation
Term
What is the difference between elastic and inelastic scatter
Definition
elastic scatter a neutron hits an atoms nucleus and transfers some of its energy to the nucleus, so as to cause it to recoil off. Where inelastic is the incoming neutron dissipates into the nucleus and then is kicked out with a reduced energy, The nucleus also gibes up a gamma ray photon
Term
Describe what happens in fission products
Definition
It is the splitting of the nucleus into at least two smaller nuclei with an accompanying release of energy.
Term
Define rad rem, and roentgen
Definition
Rad: measure of radiation abosrbed dose, defined as 100ergs of energy deposited in one gram of any material.
REM, unit of biological equivalent dose. it is the biological damage to tissue as 1 roentgen. Roentgen equivalent man. rem=rad*Wr
Roentgen. Is the measure of exposure, which is the ability of photons to produce ionization in air. sum of charge per unit mass of air. 2.58e^-4 coulombs/kg air. applies to gamma and xrays
Term
Define sievert and gray
Definition
SI unit of rem is sievert. 1 sv equals 100 rem
si unit of Rad is Gray. one Gy equals 100 rad, also applies to any material.
Term
what is acurie
Definition
it is aunit that measure the radioactivity of atoms. it is based on one gram of Radon-26. one curie is equal to 3.7e^10 dps 2.22e^12dpm
Term
Define the decay constant
Definition
is is the ln(2)/halflife of a nuclide
Term
What are ionization, excitation, bremsstralung
Definition
Ionization is whe one or more eleectrons are stripped from their bound orbits results in an ion pair
Excitation is any process that adds enough energy to an electron of an atom so that it moves to a higher energy state. atom stay nuetrally charged. coulomb force
Bremsstralung: ovvurs when a beta particle comes close to the nucleus and the forces of the nucleus slow the particle downThis results in an emisson of x ray and areduced energy beta particle.
Term
What is direct ionization
Definition
uses the coulomb forces for ionizing radiation. no actual contact is made between particles and an atom, applies to alpha and beta
Term
What is indirect ionization
Definition
uses contact to produce ionization. applies to gamma, x-ray and neutrons
Term
What is coulomb force
Definition
it is the strong electrostatic force in the nucleus of like charged particles, acts over a long range
Term
Define linear energy transplant
Definition
average value of energy locally deposited by a charged particle in an absorbing medium per unit distance.
Term
What is dose equivalence
Definition
Radiation weighting factor conversion used to derive the equivalent dose from the absorbed dose
Term
How do you calculate dose equivalence
Definition
it is calculated by times the absorbed average over the tissue or organ by the radiation weighting factor for a given typ or radiation Equation H=DtWt H=dose absorbed D=absorbed dose in radiation type W=radiation weighting factor
Term
What is stopping power
Definition
The average energy lost by a charged particle per unit distance traveled
Term
What is specific ionization
Definition
The average number of ion pairs produced by a charged particle per unit distance traveled in an absorbing medium
Term
What is the W-value
Definition
Average amount of energy needed to produce an ion pair in a given medium. This would apply to all types of radiation both particles and electromagnetic rays.
Term
What is the mass energy relationship
Definition
energy and mass can be converted into each other. and is demonstrated by E=mc^2
Term
What is mass defect
Definition
the total mass of the indicidual particle ofan atom (neutrons,proton,electrons) minus the mass of the atom as a whole. It is measured in AMU. used to calculate mass to energy conversion.
Term
how does mass defect relate to binding energy
Definition
represents the amount of energy that the mass that has been converted to energy which is needed to he bind the nucleus together
Term
What is criticality
Definition
energy required to drive the nucleus to the point of separation or splitting in half. the result is fission
Term
What radioactive decay and how does it work
Definition
It starts with a parent who is radioactive which decays to a daughter who is less radioactive
Term
What is the difference between dose and exposure
Definition
Exposure is the amount of radiation deposited in the air, whereas dose is the amount deposited in a medium
Term
What are the three parts of the cell
Definition
membrane , nucleus, cytoplasm.
Term
What is DNA and how is it affected by radiation
Definition
It is the master blueprint for the cell and for a cell to survive it must have its entire DNA. The major effects of radiation is that it inhibits DNA replication
Term
how many RADS are required to rupture the cell
Definition
3,000-5,000 rads of absorbed dose will rupture the cell
Term
What is the Law of Bergonie and Tribondeau
Definition
"the radio-sensitivity of a tissue is DIRECTLY proportional to its reproductive capacity and INVERSELY proportional to its degree of differentiation(how specialized it is"
Term
What are the 4 most radiosensitive tissues
Definition
Germinal (reproductive_ cells of the ovary and testis
Hematopoietic ( blood forming) tissues, red bone marrow, spleen , lymph nodes, thymus. Basal cells of the skin
Epithelium of the gastrointestinal track
Term
What are the 4 most radio resistance tissues
Definition
Bone, liver, Kidney and cartilage .
Term
Discuss the difference between primary and secondary effects
Definition
Ionizing radiation produces damage to cells but in a mostly nonspecific way. This means that other physical and chemical substances cause the same effects because the body responds to certain cell damage in the same way regardless of the cause
Term
What is a free radical and how does it effect the cell
Definition
When radiation passes through living cells it will directly ionize or excite atoms. This affects the forces that bind the atoms together in a molecule. if the molecule breaks up the fragments are called free radicals and ions, and are not stable. Free radicals are very reactive chemically and can combine other cells material and cause direct or indirect damage to cells.
Term
Define stochastic effects and discuss how they effect the population
Definition
Those effects in which the probability within a population of the effect occurring increases with dose, without threshold. this is to say that any dose might cause damage.
Term
Discuss non-stochastic effects
Definition
This is where the severity of the effect varies with the dose, and a threshold does exist. if a dose is kept below threshold the effect will not be observed.
Term
IS there a threshold for for observation of radiation effects.
Definition
10-25rem
below this wont expect to see effects (deterministic effects)
Term
What is lethal dose and how much is it
Definition
It is the dose expectant to cause death. LD50/30 means that within 30 days 50% of the people exposed will die without proper medical treatment.
Term
What is the difference between chronic and acute radiation exposure
Definition
Chronic is a low dose over a relatively long period of time
Acute is is a large dose of radiation over a short time period
Term
How does a TLD work
Definition
in excitation detectors, it detects when atoms give off the excess energy in the form of visible light
Term
what type of instrument do you use for a contamination survery
Definition
GM detectors
Term
Discus semi conductor use as radiation detectors
Definition
it is able to detect electrons as they move to a higher state
Term
how do you detect fast neutrons
Definition
thermalization and proton recoil
Term
how do you detect thermal neutrons
Definition
activation foils, boron activation, fission chambers, scintillation, thermoluminescence
Term
What are the advantages and disadvantages of using a pancake probe (Ludlem 3A)
Definition
Advantages include cost, good for serface contamination and monitoring alpha beta, gamma or xrays.
Disadvantages not very effective for low energy beta radiation or identifying isotopes.
Term
How do you calculate DPM from a scalar
Definition
countsperminute/eff=dpm
Term
How does a scintillator work
Definition
it measures radiation by analyzing the effects of excitation of the detector material by the incident radiation
Term
Discuss Resolving time
Definition
the time from the initial measure pulse until another pulse can be measured by the electronics
Term
Discuss recovery time
Definition
the time from the initial full size pulse to the next full size pulse produced by the detector
Term
Discuss dead time
Definition
the time from the initial pulse to another pulse can be produced by the detector
Term
Which instrument should be used to measure dose rate
Definition
NaL detectors
Term
Describe the advantages and disadvantages of a NaL detector
Definition
Have the ability to discriminate between radiation types. and different energy levels.has high gamma sensitivity, has extreme low level energy response, best alpha detector
Its not good for beta or alpha response, poor low energy gamma response cumbersome, solution is one time use. requires regular power supply
Term
Describe the advantages and disadvantages of a GeLi detector
Definition
independent of pressure and temperatures effects, require less highly regulated power supply. are more sensitive to low energy and low intensity radiations. are not used to measure true dose and have large recovery times.
Term
What is the best scintillation material for detection of alpha partices and gamma rays
Definition
inorganic powders
Term
Define and discuss the ion pairs versus high voltage curve
Definition
Ion pars must be collected in order to produce an output pulse or current flow from the detector. If a voltage potential applied across the electrodes a field is created in the detectors and the ion pairs will be accelerated towards the electrodes
Term
how many volts does it take to create an ion pair? what are the typical W values for a gas detector?
Definition
It takes 34eV to create an ion pair, typical W values for gas detectors are 25-50eV
Term
What factors affect ion par production in a radiation detector
Definition
the size and shape of the detector, pressure and composition of the gas. size of the voltage potential across the electrodes, the material of construction. the type of radiation, quantity of radiation. the energy of the radiation.
Term
What are the physical discrimination and electronic discrimination and how are they used in radiation detections
Definition
Physical are a shielding and detector gas fill
electronic measures the pulse heights
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