beta decay

beta decay
a radioactive process in which a beta particle is emitted from the nucleus of an atom, raising the atomic number of the atom by one if the particle is negatively charged, lowering it by one if positively charged.
[1930-35]

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Any of three processes of radioactive disintegration in which a beta particle is spontaneously emitted by an unstable atomic nucleus in order to dissipate excess energy.

Beta particles are either electrons or positrons. The three beta-decay processes are electron emission, positron emission, and electron capture. The process of beta decay increases or decreases the positive charge of the original nucleus by one unit without changing the mass number. Though beta decay is in general a slower process than gamma or alpha decay, beta particles can penetrate hundreds of times farther than alpha particles. Beta decay half-lives are a few milliseconds or more. See also radioactivity.

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      any of three processes of radioactive disintegration by which some unstable atomic nuclei spontaneously dissipate excess energy and undergo a change of one unit of positive charge without any change in mass number. The three processes are electron emission, positron (positive electron) emission, and electron capture. Beta decay was named (1899) by Ernest Rutherford (Rutherford, Ernest, Baron Rutherford of Nelson, of Cambridge) when he observed that radioactivity was not a simple phenomenon. He called the less penetrating rays alpha and the more penetrating rays beta. Most beta particles are ejected at speeds approaching that of light.

      All atoms heavier than ordinary hydrogen have a nucleus consisting of neutrons and protons (neutral and positively charged particles, respectively), surrounded by negative electrons; these orbital electrons are not involved in the electron emission associated with beta decay. In electron emission, also called negative beta decay (symbolized β-decay), an unstable nucleus emits an energetic electron (of relatively small mass) and an antineutrino (with little or possibly no rest mass), and a neutron in the nucleus becomes a proton that remains in the product nucleus. Thus, negative beta decay results in a daughter nucleus, the proton number (atomic number) of which is one more than its parent but the mass number (total number of neutrons and protons) of which is the same. For example, hydrogen-3 (atomic number 1, mass number 3) decays to helium-3 (atomic number 2, mass number 3). The energy lost by the nucleus is shared by the electron and the antineutrino, so that beta particles (beta particle) (the electrons) have energy ranging from zero to a distinct maximum that is characteristic of the unstable parent.

      In positron emission, also called positive beta decay (β+-decay), a proton in the parent nucleus decays into a neutron that remains in the daughter nucleus, and the nucleus emits a neutrino and a positron, which is a positive particle like an ordinary electron in mass but of opposite charge. Thus, positive beta decay produces a daughter nucleus, the atomic number of which is one less than its parent and the mass number of which is the same. Positron emission was first observed by Irène and Frédéric Joliot-Curie in 1934.

      In electron capture, an electron orbiting around the nucleus combines with a nuclear proton to produce a neutron, which remains in the nucleus, and a neutrino, which is emitted. Most commonly the electron is captured from the innermost, or K, shell of electrons around the atom; for this reason, the process often is called K-capture. As in positron emission, the nuclear positive charge and hence the atomic number decreases by one unit, and the mass number remains the same.

      Each chemical element consists of a set of isotopes (isotope) the nuclei of which have the same number of protons but differ in the number of neutrons. Within each set the isotopes of intermediate mass are stable or at least more stable than the rest. For each element, the lighter isotopes, those deficient in neutrons, generally tend toward stability by positron emission or electron capture, whereas the heavier isotopes, those rich in neutrons, usually approach stability by electron emission.

      In comparison with other forms of radioactivity, such as gamma or alpha decay, beta decay is a relatively slow process. Half-lives for beta decay are never shorter than a few milliseconds.

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Universalium. 2010.

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