Saturday, January 23, 2016
CHEM 418 Nuclear Chemistry, Winter 2016: Lecture 6 Gamma Decay
Gamma decay is described in two lectures. The first lecture covers the fundamentals of gamma decay and second lecture describes Moessbauer spectroscopy. Different methods to find data on gamma decay yields for decay of isotopes are presented. The energetics involved in gamma decay are provided. This includes recoil from gamma, which is exploited in Moessbauer spectroscopy. Decay types in gamma transitions are explained, focusing on electromagnetic basis for the gamma emission. Transition probabilities and internal conversions inherent to gamma decay are covered. Isotope examples for internal conversion electrons are given. Angular correlations in gamma decay are described with an experimental example provided. The use of gamma decay in Moessbauer spectroscopy is discussed.
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I sent the lecture 6 pdf quiz as an attachment through email.
ReplyDeleteI want to know the difference of gamma decay and the isomeric transition. Is isomeric transition is a type of gamma decay?
Thank you very much
And I have a question on the quiz
DeleteFor question 1, is decay scheme A in the question=decay scheme 1 in the answer?
This is correct. I saw this error and changed it yesterday.
DeleteThe isomeric transition is long-lived excited state de-excitation. We also describe this as metastable state.
DeleteThank you very mcuh
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DeleteQuiz 6 submitted via email - raghav
ReplyDeleteThanks for pdf quiz 6
DeleteQuiz 6 submitted via email - raghav
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment and submission
DeleteQuiz 6 submitted through email. thank you!
ReplyDeletePdf quiz 6 received. Thanks
DeletePDF Quiz 6 sent through the Canvas email!
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DeleteLecture viewed, and quiz submitted.
ReplyDeletePdf quiz 6 received. Thank you
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ReplyDelete-Faruq
Quiz received
DeleteEmailed the quiz. Just want to verify, the emission of a electron/positron pair or the emission of an atomic electron are not considered Gamma Decays?
ReplyDelete-Taylor Posey
Great question. They are not gamma decays, which is the emissions of a photon during de-excitation. These are other routes for nuclear de-excitation,so we group them together with gamma decay.
DeleteEmailed you PDF quiz 6.
ReplyDeletethanks for the PDF quiz
DeleteQuiz sent via Canvas email. Links for % Yield databases given in lecture didn't work for me; not sure if anyone else had that issue.
ReplyDeleteThanks.
the swedish site works (http://nucleardata.nuclear.lu.se/toi/)
Deletethe LBL site may not. You can also get the android app from the IAEA.
Lecture 6 parts I and II viewed and pdf quiz 6 sent via email!
ReplyDeletethanks for the comments.
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