Nuclear Physics - Difference between electron capture and beta plus decay

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In nuclear physics, when an atom's proton number decreases during decay, it can occur through either electron capture or beta plus emission. Beta plus emission requires the original atom's mass to be at least 2 electron masses greater than the final atom's mass, while electron capture occurs if the final mass is less. To determine which decay mode is more likely when both are possible, one can look at branching fractions, which indicate the probabilities of each decay type. For example, Cu-64 decays via both methods, with electron capture occurring about 45% of the time. In introductory physics courses, it's acceptable to refer to both decay modes without needing to specify which is more likely.
emilypearson
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So my question has a few parts to it.
First, if an atom is decaying and the proton (Z) number is decreasing in the decay process, am I correct in assuming that the nucleus is either decaying by electron capture of beta plus emission?
Secondly, I understand that beta plus emission can only occur is the mass of the original atom is at least 2 electron masses larger than the final atom. Therefore if the final mass is under 2 electron masses, the atom decays by electron capture. However, if the final mass is larger than 2 electron masses, how do you know if it is decaying by beta plus emission or electron capture?
Thanks in advance for any help.
Emily.
 
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Hi Emily-
Cu64 is odd-odd, and decays to both Zn64 (even-even) by beta-minus decay, and by positron AND electron capture to Ni64 (even-even). See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper-64. I think V50 is similar.
 
Thanks, but is there any way of predicting which is more likely? For example Ce-137 (Z=58) decays by positron decay (according to a search engine). How would you know it is beta plus not electron capture? Or is there no way of working it out (via masses etc)?
 
Cu64 decay modes show that electron capture is about 45%, meaning that only about 55% of decays emit a typical charged beta ± decay lepton with a contiunuous energy spectrum. The best signature would be to look at the unique decay neutrino energy spectrum in electron capture (LOL).
 
So I guess for first year university physics I'm ok just to write 'beta plus and/or electron capture' and hope for the best in the exam next week! Thanks very much for your help.
 
Yes, computing actual branching fractions, or even estimating them, is way beyond what you might be expected to do or know how to do. You might need to know how to measure these experimentally, though.
 
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