Nuclear Reactions and Decay
Nuclear reactions and decay are the processes by which atomic nuclei transform, releasing energy and particles and changing one element into another.
Definition
Nuclear reactions and decay encompass the spontaneous transformations of radioactive nuclei and the induced rearrangements of nucleons when nuclei collide with particles or other nuclei, all governed by conservation of energy, momentum, charge, and nucleon number.
Scope
This area covers the spontaneous decay of unstable nuclei through alpha, beta, and gamma emission, and induced nuclear reactions including fission, fusion, scattering, and capture. It treats the conservation laws, energetics, and reaction mechanisms governing these processes, the cross sections that quantify reaction probabilities, and the central role of nuclear reactions in energy generation, element formation, and laboratory studies of nuclear structure.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- What governs the rate and mode by which an unstable nucleus decays?
- How is energy released in fission and fusion, and how do these processes proceed?
- How are the probabilities of nuclear reactions quantified by cross sections?
- What mechanisms determine the outcome of a collision between nuclei?
Key concepts
- Alpha, beta, and gamma decay
- Half-life and decay constant
- Q-value and reaction energetics
- Nuclear fission and fusion
- Reaction cross sections
- Conservation laws in nuclear reactions
Key theories
- Radioactive decay law
- Unstable nuclei decay at a rate proportional to the number present, giving an exponential decay characterized by a half-life independent of external conditions.
- Fission and fusion energetics
- The binding-energy curve dictates that splitting heavy nuclei or fusing light nuclei releases energy, processes first identified in uranium fission and in the stellar fusion cycles.
Clinical relevance
Nuclear reactions and decay underlie nuclear power and weapons, radiometric dating, the production of medical and industrial isotopes, radiation therapy, and the nucleosynthesis of elements in stars and stellar explosions.
History
Radioactivity, discovered by Becquerel and the Curies and classified by Rutherford into alpha, beta, and gamma rays, opened the study of nuclear transformations. Rutherford achieved the first artificial nuclear reaction in 1919, Meitner and Frisch interpreted nuclear fission in 1939, and Bethe explained stellar energy generation by fusion the same year, establishing nuclear reactions as the engines of energy and element synthesis.
Key figures
- Ernest Rutherford
- Lise Meitner
- Enrico Fermi
- Hans Bethe
Related topics
Seminal works
- meitner1939
- bethe1939
- krane1988
Frequently asked questions
- What is a half-life?
- A half-life is the time required for half of a sample of a radioactive nuclide to decay. It is a fixed property of each nuclide and is independent of temperature, pressure, or chemical state.
- Why do both fission and fusion release energy?
- Binding energy per nucleon peaks near iron. Splitting nuclei heavier than iron and fusing nuclei lighter than iron both move toward more tightly bound configurations, releasing the difference as energy.