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Gamma Decay

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Title: Gamma Decay


1
Gamma Decay
  • Energetics
  • Decay Types
  • Transition Probabilities
  • Internal Conversion
  • Angular Correlations
  • Emission of photon during deexcitation of the
    nucleus
  • Wide range of energies
  • Isomers
  • two configurations
  • different total angular momenta
  • Energy differences
  • long-lived nuclear states are called isomeric
    states
  • gamma ray decay is called isomeric transition (IT)

2
? Transitions
  • De-excitation of excited states are ? transitions
  • ?- and ?-decay processes leave product nucleus in
    either ground state or, more often, an excited
    state
  • Emission of electromagnetic radiation (?
    radiation), internal-conversion electrons, or
    newly created electron and positron
  • internal conversion comes about by interaction
    between nucleus and extranuclear electrons
    leading to emission of electron with kinetic
    energy equal to difference between energy of
    nuclear transition involved and binding energy of
    the electron
  • Characterized by a change in energy without
    change in Z and A

3
Energetics
  • Recoil from gamma decay
  • Energy of excited state must equal
  • Photon energy, and recoil
  • Mc2Mc2EgTr
  • Momentum same for recoil and photon
  • If Eg 2 MeV, and A50
  • recoil energy is about 40 eV
  • Use 931.5 MeV/AMU

4
Energetics
5
Multipole Radiation Selection Rules
  • Since ? radiation arises from electromagnetic
    effects, it can be thought of as changes in the
    charge and current distributions in nuclei
  • classified as magnetic (M) or electric (E)
  • E and M multipole radiations differ in parity
    properties
  • Transition probabilities decrease rapidly with
    increasing angular-momentum changes
  • as in ?-decay
  • Ii If ? l ? ?Ii-If?, where Ii is the initial
    spin state and If is the final spin state
  • if initial and final state have the same parity,
    electric multipoles of even l and magnetic
    multipoles of odd l are allowed if different
    parity, the opposite is true

6
  • 0 ? 0 transitions cannot take place by photon
    emission
  • photon has spin and therefore must remove at
    least one unit of angular momentum
  • If no change in parity in 0 ? 0 transition,
    de-excitation may occur by emission of an
    internal-conversion electron or by simultaneous
    emission of an electron-positron pair (?E ? 1.415
    MeV)
  • Transitions between two I0 states of opposite
    parity cannot take place by any first-order
    process
  • would require simultaneous emission of two ?
    quanta or two conversion electrons

Friedlander Kennedy, p.97
7
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8
Isomeric Transitions
  • An IT is a ? decay from an isomeric state
  • Transition probability or partial decay constant
    for ? emission ?? ? E2lA2l/3
  • for given spin change, half lives decrease
    rapidly with increasing A and more rapidly with
    increasing E
  • Use of extreme single-particle model
  • assumes ? transition can be described as
    transition of a single nucleon from one
    angular-momentum state to another
  • the rest of the nucleus being represented as a
    potential well
  • model predicts, for given nucleus, low-lying
    states of widely differing spins in certain
    regions of neutron and proton numbers
  • numbers preceding the shell closures at N or Z
    values of 50, 82, 126
  • coincide with islands of isomerism

9
Internal Conversion Coefficients
  • Internal conversion is an alternative to ?-ray
    emission
  • comes about by interaction between nucleus and
    extranuclear electrons leading to emission of
    electron with kinetic energy equal to difference
    between energy of nuclear transition involved and
    binding energy of the electron
  • Internal conversion coefficient ? is ratio of
    rate of internal conversion process to rate of ?
    emission
  • ranges from zero to infinity
  • coefficients for any shell generally increase
    with decreasing energy, increasing ?I, and
    increasing Z

10
IC and Nuclear Spectroscopy
  • Internal conversion electrons show a line
    spectrum with lines corresponding to the
    ?-transition energy minus binding energies of the
    K, L, M, shells in which the conversion occurs
  • difference in energy between successive lines are
    used to determine Z
  • ?K/ ?L ratios can be used to characterize
    multipole order and thus ?I and ??
  • this ratio, though, doesnt vary as widely as the
    individual coefficients
  • If Z of x-ray-emitting species known, it can be
    determined whether it decays by EC or IT
  • in former, x-rays will be of Z-1 in latter, Z

11
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12
Angular Correlations
  • So far we have assumed that once removed from the
    decaying nuclei, ? rays bear no recognizable mark
    of the multipole interaction that gave birth to
    them
  • usually true, but different multipole fields give
    rise to different angular distributions of
    emitted radiation with respect to nuclear-spin
    direction of the emitting nucleus
  • ordinarily deal with samples of radioactive
    material that contains randomly oriented nuclei,
    so observed angular distribution of ? rays is
    isotropic

13
Angular Correlations
  • Schematic diagram of angular correlations
  • (a) shows angular distribution of dipole
    radiation for ?m 0 and ?m ? 1
  • (b) shows magnetic substrates populated in ?1?2
    cascade from J0 to J1 to J0

14
  • If nuclear spins can be aligned in one direction,
    angular distribution of emitted ?-ray intensity
    would depend predictably on the initial nuclear
    spin and multipole character of the radiation
  • can use strong external electric or magnetic
    field at low temperatures or observe a ? ray in
    coincidence with a preceding radiation
  • in coincidence experiment, where angle ? between
    the two sample-detector axes is varied, the
    coincidence rate will vary as a function of ?

Correlation function
where Aa2a4
15
Mössbauer Spectroscopy
  • Principles
  • Conditions
  • Spectra
  • Principles
  • Nuclear transitions
  • emission and absorption of gamma rays
  • sometimes called nuclear gamma resonance
    spectroscopy
  • Only suitable source are isotopes
  • Emission from isotope is essentially
    monochromatic
  • Energy tuning done by Doppler effect
  • Vibration of source and absorber
  • spectra recorded in mm/s (1E-12 of emission)

16
Recoil
  • Gaseous atom or molecule emits radiation (energy
    E)
  • momentum of E/c
  • Recoil (P) -E/c Mv
  • M mass of emitter, v is recoil velocity
  • Associated recoil energy of emitter
  • ER Mv2 /2 E2/2Mc2
  • ER (in eV) 537 E2/M (E in MeV)
  • For radiation near UV or below with normal atoms
    or molecules v is very small
  • With gamma decay E is large enough to have a
    measurable effect
  • ETE ER for emission

17
Recoil
  • If E is to excite a nucleus
  • E ET ER
  • Molecules in gas or liquid cannot reabsorbed
    photon
  • In practice lattice vibrational modes may be
    excited during absorption
  • Emitting nuclei in chemical system
  • Thermal equilibrium, moving source
  • Doppler shift of emitted photon
  • J is angle between direction of motion of the
    nucleus and emitted photon

18
Recoil Free Fraction
  • J can vary from -1 to 1,so distribution is ET -ER
  • distribution around 0.1 eV at room temp
  • Some chemical energy goes into photon, and some
    recoil energy goes into lattice phonon
  • Heisenberg uncertainly implies distribution of
    energy from finite half-life
  • G (in eV) 4.55E-16/t1/2 (sec)
  • What Mössbauer did
  • Total recoil in two parts, kinetic and
    vibrational
  • If emitter and absorber are part of lattice,
    vibrations are quantized
  • Recoil energy transfer only in correct quanta

19
Recoil Free Fraction
  • If recoil energy is smaller than quantized
    vibration of lattice the whole lattice vibrates
  • Mass is now mass of lattice, v is small, and so
    is kinetic part of recoil energy
  • E ET and recoil energy goes into lattice
    phonon system
  • lattice system is quantized, so it is possible to
    find a state of the system unchanged after
    emission
  • 0.9 for metallic, 0.2 for metal-organic
  • related to stiffness of crystal

20
Recoil free fraction
  • E gt 150 keV nearly all events vibrate lattice
  • E ET for a small amount of decays
  • Where E ET gives rise to Mössbauer spectra
  • Portion of radiation which is recoil free is
    recoil-free fraction
  • Vibration of lattice reduced with reduced T
  • Recoil-free fraction increases with decreasing T
  • T range from 100 to 1000 K
  • Half-lives greater than 1E-11 seconds, natural
    width around 1E-5 eV
  • For gamma decay of 100 keV, Doppler shift of
  • 1E-5 eV is at a velocity of 3 cm/s

21
Isomeric or Chemical Shift
  • Volume of nucleus in excited state is different
    from ground state
  • Probability of electron orbitals found in the
    nucleus is different
  • Difference appears as a difference in the total
    electron binding state and contributes to
    transition energy
  • ET ²E(nucl) ²E(elect) binding energies
  • Consider an emitting nucleus (excited) and
    absorber (ground) in different chemical states
  • Difference in ²E(elect) and therefore ET
  • Change is chemical shift

22
Magnetic Dipole Splitting
  • magnetic moment will add to transition energy
  • ET ²E(nucl) ²E(elect) ²E(mag)
  • Change in magnetic moment will effect shift
  • Split also occurs (2I1) values
  • around 1cm/s
  • Electric Quadrapole Splitting
  • inhomogeneous magnetic field
  • ET ²E(nucl) ²E(elect) ²E(mag)²E(quad)
  • around 1cm/2

23
Technique
  • Intensity of photon from emitter is detected
  • Velocity of emitter and absorber recorded
  • important to know these values
  • May be cooled and place in magnetic field
  • Used in
  • amorphous materials
  • catalysts
  • soil
  • coal
  • sediments
  • electron exchange

24
Decay Scheme
25
Mössbauer Devise
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