Solved: Radioactive Decay Equations, Identify Type of Decay

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on completing decay equations and identifying the types of decay involved. Participants analyze various decay processes, including beta decay and alpha decay, while expressing confusion about additional particles or nuclides represented by question marks. There is uncertainty regarding the role of energy in the decay equations and whether some equations represent fission rather than typical decay. The final equation raises questions about the outcome of electron-positron interactions, leading to the hypothesis that they produce neutrinos. Overall, the thread highlights challenges in understanding radioactive decay equations and the associated particles.
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Homework Statement



Complete the following decay equations by inserting the missing particle or nuclide information. Identify each type of decay.

i) 90?Sr = ?39Y + ? + ?

ii) 22?Na = ??Ne + β+ + ? + energy

iii)24294Pu = ??? + alpha + ?

iv) 235?U = 91?Sr + 141?Xe + ?

v) 0-1e + 0+1e → ?


The Attempt at a Solution



i) 9038Sr = 8939Y + β- + ? this is beta decay.
- note, lost 1 nucleon. is this ? just 1n?

ii) 2211Na = 2010Ne + β+ + ? + energy also beta decay
- note, lost 2 nucleons. is this ? just 21n?

iii) 24294Pu = 23892U + alpha + ? alpha decay

iv) 23592U = 9138Sr + 14154Xe + ? fission?

v) i have no idea.

- Just looking at that, there seems to be an extra ? for each decay equation. in my text throughout there's only the decay pronumeral in the products, not something extra as well. so I am not really sure what is meant to go in there?
- Also I am not sure about the relevance of the energy is ii) since all of these decays emit energy anyway.
- iv) doesn't look to be any kind of decay, it seems to represent fission. which would make that '?' 31n?
- and v) i have no idea what the result of an electron positron bond is.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
v) Matter and antimatter combining to result in something that, according to the superscript and subscript, will have no mass and no charge. That tells us what comes out of it.
 
ohhh... becomes 2 neutrinos where a neutrino is a particle with no charge and mass equal to an electron?... that would conserve mass and charge...

and your not sure about the other '?' either?
 
stumpedddd
 
...

just so my thread goes to the top of the list again so more people see it. haha
 
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