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PHYS1004: Radiation

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The Bohr picture for hydrogen. The energy levels of hydrogen: En = -13.6/n2 eV. ... The continuous X-ray spectrum. The line spectrum ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PHYS1004: Radiation


1
PHYS1004 Radiation
  • Bill Tango
  • Room 314

2
Electromagnetic radiation
  • EM waves predicted by Maxwell
  • EM waves travel (in vacuum) at c 3x108 m/s.
  • The wavelength-frequency relation lf c
  • EM waves cover wide range of frequencies
  • Continuum line radiation

3
Blackbody radiation photoelectric effect
  • Blackbody radiationthe predictions of
    classical mechanics are completely wrong.
  • The photoelectric effect difficult to explain
    classically.

4
Einstein PE Effect
  • Einsteins interpretation light consists of
    quanta having energy E hf where h is Plancks
    constant.
  • Quanta give up their energy on an all or nothing
    basis.
  • This provides an explanation for the PE effect.
  • But how can we reconcile wave and particle
    pictures?

5
deBroglie Waves
  • Photon momentum the wavelength
  • deBroglie by analogy there may be matter waves
  • Experimentally confirmed.
  • Interpretation
  • Matter probability waves
  • Light and probability waves

6
Schrödingers Equation
  • Mathematically, the waves are described by
    Schrödingers equation.
  • Properties of the wave function and
    interpretation as a probability density
  • The Heisenberg uncertainty principle
  • Interpretation

7
Potential wells
  • Electrons/particles in potential wells
  • The infinite potential well
  • Transition energies absorption/emission of
    photons
  • The quantisation of energy states
  • Finite wells (qualitative only)
  • Tunnelling (qualitative)

8
The Hydrogen Atom
  • Bohrs theory
  • The predictions of quantum mechanics

9
Properties of atoms
  • Line spectra revisited
  • Electron spin
  • Quantum numbers n, l, m, s
  • The Pauli exclusion principle
  • Atom building

10
Revision EM radiation
  • Electromagnetic radiation
  • The EM spectrum
  • Line spectra
  • Black body radiation qualitative
  • Wien displacement law
  • The problems with the classical theory

11
PE Effect
  • No photocurrent when f lt fc
  • When f gt fc, current proportional to intensity.
  • Stopping potential
  • Einstein Light consists of quanta or photons.

12
Photons, waves, deBroglie
  • Classical EM wave only gives the probability of
    finding a photon somewhere.
  • deBroglie extends concept to matter waves
  • Wave must be interpreted as a probability density
    function.

13
Heisenberg uncertainty principle
  • Because we can only predict probabilities, we
    cannot know exact position/momentum
  • Uncertainty is intrinsic.

14
Schrödingers Equation
  • The probability wavesthe wave functionare
    described by Schrödingers equation.
  • The square of the wavefunction, ?2(x), gives the
    probability.
  • Qualitative interpretation of the waves
    relation to deBroglie waves.

15
Potential wells
  • What is a potential well?
  • Bound states are quantised particles can only
    have certain energy states.
  • Transitions between states are quantised hf Ef
    Ei.
  • Example infinite potential well.
  • Tunnelling qualitative only.

16
Atoms
  • The Bohr picture for hydrogen.
  • The energy levels of hydrogen En
    -13.6/n2 eV.
  • Quantum numbers n, l, ml, s
  • The Pauli exclusion principle
  • Atom building and the periodic table
    (qualitative).

17
X-rays
  • The continuous X-ray spectrum
  • The line spectrum
  • Moseley and Rutherfords work atoms contain
    small, dense nuclei
  • The size of nuclei

18
Properties of nuclei
  • Terminology (atomic number, mass number,
    isotopes, nuclides)
  • The relation between mass and energy E mc2
  • Nuclear masses and the binding energy
  • The mass defect fission and fusion

19
Radioactive decay
  • The decay rate disintegration constant l.
  • Activity total decay rate
  • Half-life mean lifetime
  • SI unit becquerel

20
Alpha, beta gamma rays
  • The characteristics of alpha radiation
  • The characteristics of beta radiation
  • Two kinds
  • Evidence for the neutrino
  • The characteristics of gamma radiation
  • Carbon dating
  • Other applications of radioactivity

21
Dosimetry
  • Basic quantities
  • Source activity (unit Bq)
  • Exposure
  • Absorbed dose (unit gray Gy 1 J/kg)
  • Biological dose equivalent (unit sievert Sv)
    H Q.D
  • The quality factor Q

22
Biological effects of radiation
  • The biological half-life
  • Effective half-life
  • Lethal whole-body dose LD50/30.
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