Introduction

Nuclear physics: branch of physics studying atomic nuclei, components (protons, neutrons), their interactions, and phenomena arising therein. Scope: nuclear structure, radioactive decay, nuclear reactions, nuclear energy. Importance: fundamental physics, astrophysics, medical imaging, energy production.

"The nucleus is the core of matter, holding the secrets of energy and the universe." -- Ernest Rutherford

Structure of the Nucleus

Constituents

Protons: positively charged baryons, charge +1e, mass ~1.0073 u. Neutrons: neutral baryons, mass ~1.0087 u. Nucleons: collective term for protons and neutrons.

Size and Density

Radius: approximately R = R₀ A^(1/3), where R₀ ~1.2 fm, A = mass number. Density: ~2.3 × 10^17 kg/m³, nearly constant across nuclei.

Binding Energy

Energy holding nucleons together. Determined by mass defect Δm via Einstein’s relation E = Δm c². Binding energy per nucleon peaks near iron (Fe-56).

Table: Typical Nuclear Parameters

ParameterValue
Nuclear radius (R)1.2 × A^(1/3) fm
Nucleon mass~1 u (atomic mass unit)
Nuclear density~2.3 × 10^17 kg/m³
Binding energy per nucleon~8 MeV (max near Fe-56)

Nuclear Forces

Strong Nuclear Force

Fundamental interaction binding nucleons. Short range (~1-2 fm). Charge independent. Attractive at intermediate distances, repulsive at very short range to prevent collapse.

Exchange Particles

Mesons (pions) mediate nuclear force in Yukawa theory. Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) explains force via gluon exchange between quarks inside nucleons.

Properties

Non-central, spin dependent, saturating (each nucleon interacts with limited neighbors). Stronger than electromagnetic repulsion between protons at short range.

Mathematical Form

V(r) = -g² (e^{-μr}) / rwhere:g = coupling constant,μ = meson mass / ħc,r = nucleon separation distance.

Radioactivity

Types of Decay

Alpha decay: emission of He-4 nucleus, reduces atomic number by 2, mass number by 4. Beta decay: neutron converts to proton or vice versa, emits electron/positron and neutrino. Gamma decay: emission of high-energy photons, no change in nucleon number.

Decay Laws

Exponential decay: N(t) = N₀ e^(-λt), where λ = decay constant. Half-life T₁/₂ = ln(2)/λ.

Applications

Radiometric dating, medical diagnostics (PET scans), nuclear medicine, radiotherapy, nuclear power control.

Table: Common Radioactive Isotopes

IsotopeDecay ModeHalf-life
Uranium-238Alpha decay4.5 billion years
Carbon-14Beta decay5730 years
Technetium-99mGamma decay6 hours

Nuclear Reactions

Types

Fusion: light nuclei combine to form heavier nucleus, releases energy. Fission: heavy nucleus splits into smaller nuclei, releases energy. Spallation: high-energy particle knocks out nucleons. Neutron capture: nucleus absorbs neutron, may become unstable.

Reaction Notation

A(a,b)Bwhere:A = target nucleus,a = incident particle,b = emitted particle,B = product nucleus.

Energy Considerations

Q-value: energy released or absorbed, Q = (mass_initial - mass_final) c². Positive Q: exothermic reaction; negative Q: endothermic.

Nuclear Fission

Mechanism

Heavy nucleus (e.g., U-235) absorbs neutron, becomes unstable, splits into two lighter nuclei, releases neutrons and energy (~200 MeV per fission).

Chain Reactions

Emitted neutrons induce further fission events. Controlled in reactors, uncontrolled in weapons. Critical mass required for sustained reaction.

Fission Products

Range of isotopes, often radioactive. Includes elements around mass numbers 90-140. Neutron emission important for reactor control and weapon yield.

Nuclear Fusion

Principle

Light nuclei (e.g., isotopes of hydrogen) combine at high temperature and pressure, overcoming electrostatic repulsion, forming heavier nucleus and releasing energy.

Conditions

Temperatures >10^7 K, high density, confinement (magnetic or inertial). Required to achieve sufficient cross-section for fusion.

Applications

Stellar energy source, experimental reactors (tokamaks, inertial confinement), potential clean energy source.

Nuclear Models

Liquid Drop Model

Treats nucleus as charged liquid drop. Explains binding energy, fission, surface effects, volume energy, Coulomb repulsion, asymmetry energy.

Shell Model

Nucleons occupy discrete energy levels, magic numbers correspond to filled shells. Explains nuclear spin, parity, stability.

Collective Model

Combines shell and liquid drop models. Explains nuclear vibrations, rotations, deformation effects.

Nuclear Isotopes

Definition

Atoms with same proton number (Z) but different neutron number (N). Isotopes exhibit different nuclear stability and decay modes.

Stable vs Radioactive

Stable isotopes: do not undergo radioactive decay. Radioisotopes: unstable, decay emitting radiation. Stability influenced by neutron-to-proton ratio.

Isotopic Applications

Tracer studies, dating techniques, medical diagnostics, nuclear reactors, environmental studies.

Applications of Nuclear Physics

Energy Production

Nuclear reactors: controlled fission for electricity. Experimental fusion reactors targeted for clean energy.

Medicine

Radiotherapy for cancer, diagnostic imaging (PET, SPECT), radioisotope tracers.

Industry and Research

Material analysis (neutron activation), radiocarbon dating, nuclear weapons, particle accelerators.

Experimental Techniques

Particle Accelerators

Accelerate charged particles to high energies for nuclear collisions. Types: cyclotron, synchrotron, linear accelerator.

Detectors

Geiger counters, scintillation detectors, semiconductor detectors, bubble chambers, cloud chambers. Detect charged particles, photons, neutrons.

Spectroscopy

Gamma and alpha spectroscopy identify isotopes, measure decay energies, nuclear structure.

Recent Advances

Exotic Nuclei

Studies of nuclei far from stability: halo nuclei, superheavy elements synthesis.

Neutrino Physics

Neutrino oscillations, mass measurements impacting nuclear decay and astrophysics.

Fusion Research

Progress in magnetic confinement (ITER), inertial confinement (NIF), alternative fusion fuels.

References

  • M.A. Preston, R.K. Bhaduri, Structure of the Nucleus, Addison-Wesley, 1975.
  • K. S. Krane, Introductory Nuclear Physics, Wiley, 1987.
  • B. Povh et al., Particles and Nuclei: An Introduction to the Physical Concepts, Springer, 2006.
  • S. M. Qaim, Radioisotopes in Medicine and Industry, Wiley-VCH, 2001.
  • D.J. Griffiths, Introduction to Elementary Particles, Wiley-VCH, 2008.