At GCSE level, beta decay is said to be the emission of an electron (or positron, in beta-plus decay) when an unstable nucleus transforms into a more stable nucleus. The parent and daughter nuclei are different elements with the same nucleon number (sum of neutrons and protons) but their proton numbers vary by +1 for … Continue reading Beta Decay Q-value
Beta Decay and Energy Conservation
I have just finished reading an excellent book that traces various theories about beta decay in the first third of the Twentieth Century. Controversy and Consensus: Nuclear Beta Decay 1911-1934 is an editted version of the successful PhD thesis written by Carsten Jensen, who clearly had a deep passion for unravelling physics history but died … Continue reading Beta Decay and Energy Conservation
Hideki Yukawa and Meson Theory
How does the nucleus of an atom stay together? Why don’t the positively-charged protons repel each other and cause the nucleus to disintegrate? The early models of the atom imagined solid spheres, perhaps with different sizes, shapes or “colours” distinguishing one type of atom from another. Then came J J Thomson’s discovery of the electron … Continue reading Hideki Yukawa and Meson Theory
