Our site uses cookies. Some of the cookies we use are essential for parts of the site to operate and have already been set. You may delete and block all cookies from this site, but parts of the site will not work. To find out more about cookies on this website, see our Cookie Policy
Accept
© eRevision.uk and ZigZag Education 2025
This test is run by .
Note that your final mark will not be saved in the system.

Nuclear radiation GapFill

Running Total
0
0%
Attempt
1 of 3

You must fill all the gaps before clicking ‘Check Answers!’

Some isotopes are unstable. They can become more stable by undergoing radioactive decay, where they change their properties by emitting a particle or electromagnetic radiation.
The  count-ratedosehalf-lifedecay constantemissivityactivity of a sample is the number of radioactive decays which occur per second, which has units of  roentgenssievertsbecquerelscurieshertzteslas.
Nuclear decays can't be detected directly, but the radiation emitted during a nuclear decay can.  Marsden-Bragg detectorsRutherford-Chadwick countersSchuster detectorsGeiger-Muller tubesLoebinger tubesThomson-Thompson chambers can count the number of radioactive emissions that pass through the detector itself, but cannot detect all of the decays produced by the sample.
The types of radioactive decay are:
  •  FissionGammaNeutronFusionBetaAlpha decay, which releases a helium-4 nucleus, and reduces the mass number of the nucleus by 4 and the atomic number by 2.
  •  FissionNeutronFusionBetaGammaAlpha decay, which releases a high-speed electron, and increases the atomic number of the nucleus by 1 but doesn't change the mass number.
  •  AlphaFissionFusionBetaNeutronGamma decay, which releases high-energy electromagnetic radiation, and which doesn't affect the atomic or mass numbers of the nucleus.
  •  GammaBetaNeutronAlphaFusionFission decay, which releases a neutrally charged subatomic particle, and reduces the mass number of the nucleus by 1 but doesn't change the atomic number.

Nuclear decay is random, so it's impossible to predict when a particular nucleus will decay, but it is possible to use laws of probability to predict how many nuclei will decay in a given time period. The  activityhalf-lifedosedecay constantcount-rateemissivity of a sample is the time taken for the number of radioactive nuclei in the sample to reduce to half of its original value.
There are lots of hazards associated with nuclear decay.  EmissionFusionContaminationIrradiationFissionIonisation is when nuclear material gets onto or into another material.  FissionIrradiationFusionEmissionContaminationIonisation is the exposure of a material to radiation.

This is your 1st attempt! You get 3 marks for each one you get right. Good luck!

Pass Mark
70%