Alpha decay
From Wikinfo
| Nuclear processes |
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Radioactive decay processes
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Alpha decay is a form of radioactive decay in which an atomic nucleus ejects an alpha particle and transforms into a nucleus with mass number 4 less and atomic number 2 less. For example:
- <math>
{}^2{}^{38}_{92}\hbox{U}\;\to\;{}^2{}^{34}_{90}\hbox{Th}\;+\;{}^4_2\hbox{He}, </math> although this is usually written as:
- <math>
{}^{238}\hbox{U}\;\to\;^{234}\hbox{Th}\;+\;\alpha. </math> Note that an alpha particle is a helium nucleus, and that both mass number and atomic number are conserved. Alpha decay can essentially be thought of as nuclear fission where the parent nucleus splits into two daughter nuclei. In some radioactive substances when beta decay occurs along with alpha decay, atomic helium is formed.
References
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Alpha_decay" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_decay, used under the GNU Free Documentation License

