Radioactive Decay

Radioactive Decay

Assessment

Flashcard

Science

9th - 12th Grade

Easy

Created by

Barbara White

Used 1+ times

FREE Resource

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20 questions

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1.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Radioactivity Noun

[ray-dee-oh-ak-tiv-i-tee]

Back

Radioactivity


The spontaneous emission of energetic particles or waves from unstable atomic nuclei as they undergo decay.

Example: This graph shows that as a radioactive substance decays, the amount remaining is halved after each 'half-life' period, starting from 100%.
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2.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Ionizing Radiation Noun

[eye-on-eye-zing ray-dee-ay-shun]

Back

Ionizing Radiation


Energetic particles or waves with enough energy to remove tightly bound electrons from atoms, thereby creating ions.

Example: This diagram shows that different types of ionizing radiation have different penetrating powers: alpha is stopped by paper, beta by aluminum, and gamma by lead.
Media Image

3.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Alpha Radiation Noun

[al-fuh ray-dee-ay-shun]

Back

Alpha Radiation


A type of ionizing radiation composed of fast-moving helium-4 nuclei, which are also known as alpha particles.

Example: An unstable parent nucleus releases an alpha particle (two protons and two neutrons), transforming into a new, smaller daughter nucleus.
Media Image

4.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Beta Radiation Noun

[bay-tuh ray-dee-ay-shun]

Back

Beta Radiation


A form of ionizing radiation consisting of high-speed electrons or positrons that are emitted during radioactive decay.

Example: This diagram shows a neutron in a Carbon-14 nucleus changing into a proton, transforming the atom into Nitrogen-14 and releasing a high-energy electron (beta radiation).
Media Image

5.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Gamma Radiation Noun

[gam-muh ray-dee-ay-shun]

Back

Gamma Radiation


High-energy electromagnetic radiation, consisting of photons, emitted from an atomic nucleus during a transition to a lower energy state.

Example: An excited atomic nucleus releases energy by emitting a high-energy gamma photon, transitioning to a more stable, relaxed state without changing its particle count.
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6.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Half-life Noun

[haf-lyf]

Back

Half-life


The characteristic time required for exactly half of the radioactive atoms in a given sample to undergo decay.

Example: This graph shows that for each half-life that passes, the amount of the radioactive substance (Co-60) decreases by half, from 10g to 5g, then to 2.5g, and so on.
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7.

FLASHCARD QUESTION

Front

Isotope Noun

[eye-so-tope]

Back

Isotope


Variants of a particular chemical element which have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons.

Example: This image shows three forms of hydrogen, called isotopes. They all have one proton, but different numbers of neutrons (zero, one, and two).
Media Image

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