Lecture 8 10
Lecture 8 10
Lecture 8 10
1
SOHO, 171A Fe emission line
Nucleons Mass Spin Charge size: ~1 fm
Proton 938.272 MeV/c2 1/2 +1e
Neutron 939.565 MeV/c2 1/2 0
Nuclei nucleons attract each other via the strong force ( range ~ 1 fm)
a bunch of nucleons bound together create a potential for an additional :
neutron proton
(or any other charged particle)
V V
Coulomb Barrier Vc
R ~ 1.3 x A1/3 fm
Potential
Potential
Z1 Z 2 e 2
Vc
R R
…
R
…
r r
Nucleons in a Box:
Discrete energy levels in nucleus
m( Z , N ) Zm p Nm n B / c 2
mp = proton mass, mn = neutron mass, m(Z,N) = mass of nucleus with Z,N
• B>0
• With B the mass of the nucleus is determined.
• B is very roughly ~A
m = mnuc + Z me - Be
4p 4
He + 2 e+ + 2e
Mass difference dM
released as energy
dE = dM c2
4
In practice one often uses mass excess and atomic masses.
Otherwise: For each positron emitted subtract 2me /c2= 1.022 MeV from the Q-value
Q / c 4 H He 4me
2
With atomic mass excess
5
The liquid drop mass model for the binding energy: (Weizaecker Formula)
(assumes incompressible fluid (volume ~ A) and sharp surface)
Z2
aC 1/ 3 Coulomb term. Coulomb repulsion leads to reduction
A uniformly charged sphere has E=3/5 Q2/R
Asymmetry term: Pauli principle to protons: symmetric filling
( Z A / 2) 2
aA of p,n potential boxes has lowest energy (ignore Coulomb)
A lower total
energy =
more bound
protons neutrons protons neutrons
and in addition: p-n more bound than p-p or n-n (S=1,T=0 more
bound than S=0,T=1)
Fusion Fission
generates generates
energy energy
7
Best fit values (from A.H. Wapstra, Handbuch der Physik 38 (1958) 1)
in MeV/c2 aV aS aC aA aP
15.85 18.34 0.71 92.86 11.46
something is missing !
8
Shell model:
(single nucleon
energy levels)
are not evenly spaced shell gaps
less bound
than average
more bound
than average
need to add
shell correction term
S(Z,N)
Magic numbers 9
Modern mass models
Global mass models – 2 basic philosophies:
1) Microscopic – Macroscopic mass models
Macroscopic part: liquid drop, droplet, or refinements thereof)
Microscopic part: shell correction, pairing correction, refinement of surface
term accounting for finite range of nuclear force …
Mass
Massmeasurements
measurementshave
havesufficiently
sufficientlyprogressed
progressedso sothat
thatglobal
globalmass
massmodels
models
are
areonly
onlyneeded
neededfor
forvery
veryneutron
neutronrich
richnuclei
nuclei(r-process,
(r-process,neutron
neutronstar
starcrusts)
crusts)
10
Modern mass models – how well are they doing?
Example: mic model: HFB series (Goriely, Pearson) currently at HFB-15 (2008)
mic-mac : Finite Range Droplet Model FRDM (Moller et al.) unchanged since 1993
0.9
0.8
rms deviation (MeV)
0.7
0.6
0.5 HFB-7
0.4 FRDM
0.3
0.2
0.1
c ew ich
9 nu n n-r
21
4 70 w
ne
18
12
Modern mass models – how well are they doing?
What about mass differences?
13
The valley of stability
Magic numbers
N=Z
Z=82 (Lead)
Valley of stability
(location of stable nuclei)
Z – number or protons
Z=50 (Tin)
Z=8 (Oxygen)
Z=4 (Helium)
N-number of neutrons 14
Const. A cut:
Binding energy per nucleon along const A due to asymmetry term in mass formula
valley of stability
15
What happens when a nucleus outside the valley of stability is created ?
(for example in a nuclear reaction inside a star ?)
dN Ndt therefore N (t ) N (t 0) e t
lifetime
half-life T1/2 = ln2 = ln2/ is time for half of the nuclei present to decay
16
Decay modes
for anything other than a neutron (or a neutrino) emitted from the nucleus
there is a Coulomb barrier
V
Coulomb Barrier Vc
unbound Z1 Z 2 e 2
particle Vc
R
R
Potential
r
If that barrier delays the decay beyond the lifetime of the universe (~ 14 Gyr)
we consider the nucleus as being stable.
Example: for 197Au -> 58Fe + 139I has Q ~ 100 MeV !
yet, gold is stable.
not all decays that are energetically possible happen
most common: • decay
• n decay
• p decay
• decay
• fission 17
decay
p n conversion within a nucleus via weak interaction
odd A
isobaric
chain
even A
isobaric
chain
N 19
Typical decay half-lives:
very near “stability” : occasionally Mio’s of years or longer
more common within a few nuclei of stability: minutes - days
20
Proton or neutron decay:
NOTE: nuclei can exist beyond the proton and neutron drip line:
• for very short time
• for a “long” time beyond p-drip if Q-value for p-decay is small (Coulomb barrier !)
• for a long time beyond n-drip at extreme densities inside neutron stars
21
6.4. decay
emission of other nuclei does not play a role (but see fission !) because of
• increased Coulomb barrier
• reduced cluster probability
Q m( Z , A) m( Z 2, A 4) m
B ( Z , A) B ( Z 2, A 4) m
22
lightest emitter: 144Nd (Z=60) (QMeV but still T1/2=2.3 x 1015 yr)
beyond Bi emission ends the valley of stability !
yellow
are emitter
Very heavy nuclei can fission into two parts (Q>0 if heavier than ~iron already)
For large nuclei surface energy less important - large deformations less
prohibitive. Then, with a small amount of additional energy (Fission barrier) nucleus
can be deformed sufficiently so that coulomb repulsion wins over nucleon-nucleon
attraction and nucleus fissions.
Separation
15
Yie ld Y( Z ) (% )
10
5
Example from
Moller et al. Nature 409 (2001) 485
0
25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65
Pro to n Nu m b e r Z
26
If fission barrier is low enough spontaneous fission can occur as a decay mode
27
Summary
Valley of stability
(location of stable nuclei)
N=Z
-decay Fission ?
Z=82 (Lead)
Z – number or protons
++&&EC
ECdecay
decay
Proton
drip line Z=50 (Tin)
- -decay
decay Neutron drip line
Z=28 (Nickel)
Z=20 (Calcium)
Z=8 (Oxygen)
Z=4 (Helium)
28
N-number of neutrons
Solar abundances and nuclear physics
Z=82 (Lead)
Sharp peaks at
n-shells
Z=50 (Tin)
N=126
Broad peaks
“below” n-shells
N=82
Z=28 (Nickel)
Z=20
(Calcium)
Nuclear physics also determines
N=50 Peak at Fe
56
set of nuclei that can be found
in nature (stable nuclei)
Z=8 N=28
N=20 Note that EVERY stable nucleus
Z=4 (Helium) seems to have been produced
N=8 Peaks at multiples somewhere in the universe
99% H,He of 4He (though not at 2x4He=8Be) 29