Monday, May 9, 2011

Advice to the public on how to stay away from radioactivity


Advising the public to stay away from radioactivity
·       What they can do to stay safe
o   Sheltering
§  Stay indoors
§  Doors and windows closed
·       This provides short-term protection from breathing in radioactive material in the air
·       Also gives protection from direct radiation from radioactive material in the air and on the ground
o   Listen to the radio
§  Follow the instructions given
o   Evacuation
§  Avoids high, short-term exposure
·       Removing people from the affected area.
o   Stable iodine
§  Taking stable (non-radioactive) iodine tablets
·       Prevents this happening with radioactive iodine released in reactor accidents

 







   Food (Watch what you eat)
§  Radioactive material deposited on soil or grass
·       Will go into food through crops and animals
·       Ban milk or other foods containing too much radioactive material
o   Detection and monitoring
§  Use people with the specialist knowledge, skills and equipment to monitor these measurements
§  Move away if there is radioactive material
o   If suspect self is contaminated
§  Carefully remove your outer layer of clothing
§  Put it in a plastic bag
§  Take a warm shower
§  Place the sealed plastic bag in a room away from people
·       Be alert for any type of symptoms in the coming months
·       Do not go near to any radioactive areas
o   Get as far away as possible



Nuclear Fusion


So...what is nuclear fusion?

Simply put, nuclear fusion is when two elementary particles collide and combine to make a new particle. 

The fused particle, however, is unstable, and quickly decays into a 'hot' neutron and a helium nucleus - an "alpha" particle and energy. 

    <- On the left is a picture of Tritium Nucleus (a form of                                                    hydrogen) colliding with Deuterium Nucleus (also a                                                   form of hydrogen) to combine and form a new particle.

History of nuclear fusion

·       Discovered accidentally by French physicist Henri Becquerel in 1896
·       Found that photographic plates stored in the dark near uranium were blackened like X-ray plates

Some interesting facts about nuclear fusion

·       Usually accompanied by the release of energy (depending on the masses of the nuclei involved)
·       Iron and nickel nuclei are the most stable nuclei
·       Fusion of two nuclei lighter than iron or nickel releases energy
·       Fusion of nuclei heavier than iron or nickel absorbs energy
·       Nuclear fusion (light) releases the energy that causes stars to shine and hydrogen bombs to explode
·       Nuclear fusion (heavy) occurs in the extremely high-energy conditions
·       New natural elements are created by nuclear fusion in stars and supernovae

Another form of nuclear fusion

·       Cold fusion
o   A hypothetical form of nuclear fusion
o   Proposed nuclear fusion process of unknown mechanism offered to explain a group of disputed experimental results
o   Termed  "Low Energy Nuclear Reaction" (LENR) or “Chemically Assisted Nuclear Reaction” (CANR)

How is nuclear fusion used

·       Hydrogen bomb (thermonuclear bomb) - a brief, controlled thermonuclear fusion reaction
·       Atomic bomb provide heat to start fusion reaction = very high temperature
·       Hydrogen nuclei fuse to form helium
·       During which it release huge amounts of energy = explosion
·       Currently, only used for nuclear weapons

Nuclear Fission


What is Nuclear fission?
·       Nuclear fission is the exact opposite of nuclear fusion (refer to previous topic).
·       It is a heavy elementary particle that splits into two or more lighter particles.
·       Happens because an element that is commonly stable comes across a stray slow moving neutron
·       Type of radioactivity
Interesting facts about nuclear fission

·       During the fusion process, fission occurs in the second half of the process.
·       People believe that fission occurs with heavy elements like uranium when they split into lighter elements.
·       In every nuclear fission, 3 products are formed
o   1st product
§  Fission products
·       Consists of the smaller nuclei produced during fission.
o   2nd product
§  Energy
·        A tiny amount of matter in the original uranium atom is changed into energy
o   3rd product
§  Neutrons


History of nuclear fission
·       Discovered accidentally in 1938 by two German physicists
·       They had been doing a series of experiments in which they used neutrons to bombard various elements
·       Radioactive form of copper produced when copper is bombarded
·       Other elements behave in the same way
How is nuclear fission used?
·       Generate electricity via
o   Power plants
§  Uses the heat generated by a nuclear fission process
·       To drive a steam turbine which generates usable electricity
o   Nuclear reactors



Half-life


What is half-life?
·       The amount of time it takes for half of a substance to undergo some specified process
·       Radioactive elements have different isotopes that decay at different rates
o   Varies with the type of isotopes
o   Short half-life
§  Oxygen (71 seconds)
o   Long half-life
§  Thallium(1.4 × 10 10 years)
§  Carbon(5,730 years)
·       Calculated by dividing 0.693 by the decay constant
o   Decay constant - dividing the number of observed disintegrations per unit time by the number of radioactive nuclei in the sample
o   Usually given the symbol k or λ
·       Is a measure of how reactive it is
o   Terms of radioactive decay
o   Participation in specific reactions