Saturday, June 30, 2012

Atomic physics & begin nuclear physicks


Lecture notes 28 June


Atomic physics:

Early concepts of the atom

Dual nature of light

Bohr theory of the hydrogen atom

MicroWAVE ovens, x-rays and lasers

Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle

Matter waves

Electron cloud model of atom

Now, how to present it?
Chapter 9:  A coupla things you all need to know.

1)     Beginnings of quantum theory:  Light, which was once thought to be purely a wave, also behaves like a particle. In particular in its interaction with matter, light is absorbed and emitted as if it were a particle. Max Planck discovered the first quantum effect in 1900 when he noticed that if he added up the energies at different frequencies being emitted from a heated ideal radiator he could get the correct spectrum (the spectrum observed in experiments) only by using a discrete sum rather than a continuous sum (summation symbol Sigma used instead of contiunuous sum of calculus integration process, see?). Einstein in 1905 extended the discovery by describing the photoelectric effect in terms of light behaving as a particle.  The particle of light soon came to be called the photon (coined by G. N. Lewis in 1916).  This was the beginning of quantum mechanics, which also says that particles like protons, neutrons and electrons also sometime behave like waves (de Broglie and Schrodinger).  When you try to find the precise position and speed of one of these particles, you find that it behaves like a wave—it doesn’t have a precise position and speed.  This is the basis of the uncertainty principle, which is also called the indeterminacy principle, which says, for instance, that the position and speed of a particle can’t be determined simultaneously with unlimited accuracy.

2)      The Bohr model of the hydrogen atom.  The Rutherford model of the atom (1911) claims that electrons orbit the nucleus somewhat like planets orbit the sun, and came about from experiments involving shooting alpha particles at gold foil.  Why gold?  Didn’t oxidize, but remained “pure” so it would give the least complicated experimental results.  Even with the Rutherford nuclear model, the neat, discrete spectrum emitted by atoms was not explained. Light with precise frequencies is observed to be emitted from atoms, not a smeared out spectrum, like light from a rainbow or sunlight refracted through a prism.  Another problem was if electrons orbit like planets, they have centripetal acceleration.  That should cause them to lose energy and fall into the nucleus.  But atoms are stable!  In 1913, Niels Bohr proposed that electrons in atoms occupy stable orbits called energy levels, and that electrons only radiate when they fall from a higher orbit to a lower one. When an atom absorbs light, an electron jumps from a lower energy level to a higher one. (Draw picture.)  Also, for the rotational and vibrational states of molecules, longer wavelength radiation is absorbed and emitted.  Microwaves are a good example.  Also for heavy atoms, x-rays can be emitted by an electron being knocked out of lowest energy level and one from a high energy level falling into that lowest level.  This spontaneous jumping of electrons to a lower energy level is not suprisingly called "spontaneous emission."  Then there are lasers, L A S E R, light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation.  A photon hits an atom in an excited state, knocking the excited electron down to a lower state, and in the process stimulating the emission of a photon which goes on off with the photon that came in.  Stimulated emission, but not the laser itself, was predicted in 1917 by Einstein in his superdooper derivation, via thermodynamic equilibrium of light and atoms in a box, of the Planck spectrum.

Chapter 10:  This is Nuclear physics, not rocket science.  Rocket science has big equations, and is complicated.  Nuclear physics has little equations and is really pretty simple.

Hydrogen is the simplest atom. One electron orbiting one proton.  If there were just the gravitational and the electromagnetic forces, hydrogen would be the only element in existence.  But there is a force stronger than the electromagnetic force that causes protons and neutrons to clump together, and form atoms heavier than hydrogen. This is the third fundamental force we’ve talked about, the first two being gravity and electromagnetism. This force that holds nuclei together is called the strong force, because it’s stronger than electromagnetism. 
But the strong force is only operative over a short range, and the electromagnetic force operates over an infinite range. (So does gravity, but it’s too weak to have an influence at the atomic level.)  The bigger a nucleus gets, the less effective the strong force is in holding it together, because the electrical repulsion of the many protons overwhelms the short-range strong force.  For atoms with more than 83 protons, the electrical repulsion between protons starts to overcome the strong force, and the nucleus decays radioactively.  So atoms with atomic numbers greater than 83 are unstable.   They decay into more stable atoms with fewer protons.

What is the atomic number?  The number of protons in an atom.  It determines the place of an element in the periodic table.  The atomic mass is the number of protons plus the number of neutrons in an atom.

Radioactivity and half-life.

The last and least-strong force that is known today is called the weak force, so called because it’s weaker than the electromagnetic force.  It causes a nucleus to emit electrons, turning a neutron into proton in the process. Also recall that a free neutron—one that’s outside a nucleus—decays with an average lifetime of about 11 minutes, so it also decays by emitting a fast-moving electron, which is called a beta ray. This type of radioactivity is important because it involves all three fundamental particles that make up an atom—proton, neutron and electron.  There are other types of nuclear radiation also.   In Greek alphabetical order the three common types are:  alpha rays (helium nuclei, 2 protons and 2 neutrons) beta rays (electrons), and gamma rays (very high energy electromagnetic waves). There is one more type, not as common but very important, and that is neutrons.  X-rays also are dangerous (ionizing), but not microwaves—they’re low energy.  X-rays produced by – draw picture.  HV supply, vacuum tube, electrons attracted to postive plate, x-rays produced when atoms in plate are hit by electrons.  Like TV, but it aint as high voltage. (wrote on the board some other stuff, just table 10.5 mainly: positrons added to list of nuclear radiation.)
_____________________ stopped here in class______________________________



Half-life.  What’s the half-life of a hamburger?  "I only want half a hamburger."  "Well, I only want half of a half of a hamburger."  "I only want half of a half of a half of a hamburger."  Which can go on indefinitely.   If you actually ate half of a hamburger in one second, handed the remaining half to your brother, who ate half of that in one second, which he handed back to you (now one fourth is left), which you ate in one second... and so on, the half life of the hamburger would be one second.  The rate at which the hamburger is eaten, you see, not constant.  It slows down. In order for the concept of half-life to be valid, the rate must be proportional to the amount remaining. (Well, you could use a 1/10th life or a 1/3rd life, or similar, but half-life is the standard measure.)

Later: Nucular reactions and uses of radionuclides. Fission and Fusion.

Biological effects of radiation.  Alpha, beta, gamma, neutrons and x-rays are ionizing radiation. Ionizing means they can knock electrons out of an atom, or even hit the nucleus and change its electrical charge.  The result in either case is that the atom becomes an ion, meaning it isn’t electrically neutral.  Ion means “an atom,or chemical combination of atoms, that has a net electric charge.”