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RADIATION AND THE HISTORY
SALONI CHAWLA
CONTENTS
• WHAT IS RADIATION ?
• TYPES OF RADIATION
• DISCOVERY OF X RAYS
• DISCOVERY OF RADIOACTIVITY
• RADIUM GIRLS
• NUCLEAR POWER PLANT
• CHERNOBYL ACCIDENT
2PANJAB UNIVERSITY
RADIATION
• In general , Radiation is the emission and
propagation of energy in the form of waves or
Particles .
• Eg :Sound ,light, x-rays , UV rays , Heat etc
• It can travel through medium or vacuum.
• In Physics, we take radiation in the form of
electromagnetic waves or particles.
• Eg :light, x-rays , UV rays etc
3PANJAB UNIVERSITY
EM SPECTRUM
4PANJAB UNIVERSITY
A TOUCH OF QUANTUM MECHANICS
• The idea of a radiation being a wave or particle
became vague when the WAVE PARTICLE theory
came into the scene .
• DE BROGLIE hypothesis says that the wave can act as
a particle sometimes and also sometimes electrons
,protons etc can behave as waves.
• This can be clearly explained by the PHOTOELECTRIC
EFFECT .
5PANJAB UNIVERSITY
• De Broglie wavelength is given by Lambda=h/p
Or h/mv .
• λ is indirectly proportional to velocity and
mass
• All the macroscopic bodies do have
wavelength associated with them but that is
too small to observed.eg football
• Also Heisenberg uncertainty principle says
that when we try to find the position its
momentum become undefined and vice versa
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 6
MORE ABOUT HEISENBERG
• The uncertainty principle says that we cannot
measure the position (x) and the momentum (p)
of a particle with absolute precision.
• The more accurately we know one of these
values, the less accurately we know the other.
• Multiplying together the errors in the
measurements of these values has to give a
number greater than or equal to half of a
constant called "h-bar".
• This is equal to Planck's constant (usually written
as h) divided by 2π.
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 7
• One way to think about the uncertainty principle is as an
extension of how we see and measure things in the everyday
world.
• You can read these words because particles of light, photons,
have bounced off the screen or paper and reached your eyes.
Each photon on that path carries with it some information
about the surface it has bounced from, at the speed of light.
• Seeing a electron, is not so simple. You might similarly
bounce a photon off it and then hope to detect that photon
with an instrument.
• But chances are that the photon will impart some momentum
to the electron as it hits it and change the path of the particle
you are trying to measure. Or else, given that quantum
particles often move so fast, the electron may no longer be in
the place it was when the photon originally bounced off it.
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 8
CLASSIFICATION
 Ionizing Radiation
– Higher energy electromagnetic waves (gamma) or
heavy particles (beta and alpha).
– High enough energy to pull electron from orbit.
 Non-ionizing Radiation
– Lower energy electromagnetic waves.
– Not enough energy to pull electron from orbit, but
can excite the electron.
9PANJAB UNIVERSITY
TYPES OF IONISING RADIATION
1.DIRECTLY IONISING RADIATION
• Energy > 13.6 ev
• Ionisation of an atom
• CHARGED
• Eg : electrons , protons or alpha ,beta etc
2. INDIRECTLY IONISING RADIATION
• Energy <13.6 ev
• Two step interaction
• UNCHARGED
• Eg x rays , gamma rays etc
10PANJAB UNIVERSITY
Can a non ionising radiation be
an indirectly ionising one ?
FOOD FOR THOUGHT ...
X RAYS
• Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen , a German physicist
discovered X rays on November 8,1895.
• He was investigating the behaviour of cathode rays in
high energy cathode ray tube
• It consists of a glass envelope from as much air as
possible was evacuated
• He covered the CRT with black paper to ensure that
light does not escape and also to block outside light .
12PANJAB UNIVERSITY
• He also darkened the laboratory room .
• He found that whenever the cathode ray was
organised the unknown type of ray was
produced .
• This ray caused the fluorescence of a small
paper coated with barium platinocyanide .
13PANJAB UNIVERSITY
• This could not be electrons from cathode ray
• This could not be the light because it is all dark
and cardboard was also there in between them.
• There is something that cross the tube when CRT
is organised and also penetrate the cardboard
• Excitement increased and he kept different things
in between them replacing cardboard results
were different
• Then he held his hand between the tube and the
fluorescent screen and the result was ...
14PANJAB UNIVERSITY
RESULT
15PANJAB UNIVERSITY
• The skeleton of his hand appeared on the
screen .
• He called it X RAYS, because he was still
unknown of this radiation .
• This led him to win NOBEL PRIZE IN 1901
16PANJAB UNIVERSITY
17PANJAB UNIVERSITY
BACKGROUND
• HENRI BECQUEREL was a scientist who worked on
minerals and optics .
• He belonged to a family of scientist ,Grandfather
discovered piezoelectricity and father phosphoresce.
• After discovery of x rays , Becquerel was trying to find
out whether these are related to phosphorescence or
not .
• He took Uranium salts and photographic film covered
with black paper and thought if the X-rays were coming
out from phosphorescent* material it will cross film
and form a image provided we need to give a UV
radiations ie Sun.
18PANJAB UNIVERSITY
DISCOVERY
• Those days in February , Paris was short of sunshine .
• Becquerel had to delay his experiment .He kept the
Uranium minerals and film in the drawer .
• After week or so he decided to develop film though
sunshine was not there
• He found that the photographic film had an impression
• Even when uranium was not phosphorescent .
• He was dumbstruck ,seeing it as he hypothesised that
Uranium salts are sources of X-rays .
19PANJAB UNIVERSITY
RESULT
20PANJAB UNIVERSITY
RESEARCH CONTINUES
• To continue the research RUTHERFORD came
• His topic of concern was to study the rays given out
by URANIUM
• He discovered that the rays by Uranium are not X
rays they are some other rays .
• He gave three rays alpha beta and gamma which
comes from some special substance
21PANJAB UNIVERSITY
EXPERIMENT
22PANJAB UNIVERSITY
AND IT DIDNOT STOP!
MARIE CURIE : MOTHER OF MODERN PHYSICS
• The term radioactivity was actually coined by Marie Curie,
who together with her husband Pierre, began investigating
the phenomenon recently discovered by Becquerel.
• She worked on the uranium ore pitchblende and found that
it emitted much more radioactivity than the uranium in the
mineral could deliver .
• It must contain another highly radioactive element, yet
unknown.
• In 1898, PIERRE AND MARIE ,discovered two new elements
- polonium and radium.
• Polonium was named after Marie's homeland, Poland.
Radium got its name from the Latin word for ray..
23PANJAB UNIVERSITY
RADIUM GIRLS
• There was a factory of radium watches which
hired 70 WOMEN to paint RADIUM DIAL .
• Ii was called UNDARK paint made of glue ,water
and radium powder .
• Women wee taught to shape paintbrush with
mouths to maintain a fine point
• Some painted their nails and teeth too with that
paint
• Management and scientist kept themselves away
from the exposure but the workers were unaware
of it .
24PANJAB UNIVERSITY
• Five Radium Girls sued U.S.
Radium in a case that
initiated labour safety
standards and workers'
rights.
• Workers suffered from
inexplicable bone fractures,
bleeding gums and
eventually, necrosis of the
jaw.
• The Radium Girls' case was
settled in 1928, putting a
swift end to shaping
paintbrushes with the
mouth and open containers
of radium paint.
25PANJAB UNIVERSITY
NUCLEAR POWER PLANT
• In nuclear power station, electrical power is
generated by nuclear reaction.
• Here, heavy radioactive elements such as Uranium
(U235) or Thorium (Th232) are subjected to nuclear
fission. This fission is done in a special apparatus
called as reactor.
• FISSION : The nuclei of heavy radioactive atoms are
broken into two nearly equal parts. During this
breaking ,huge quantity of energy is released. This
release of energy is due to mass defect. (mass of final
products are reduced than initial )
26PANJAB UNIVERSITY
• It is same as steam power station. Only difference is
that, instead of using heat generated due to coal
combustion , here heat is generated due to fission
• Heat is used to produce steam from water in the
boiler. This steam is used to drive a steam turbine.
This turbine is the prime mover of the alternator
which generates electrical energy.
• Very less amount of nuclear fuel can generate huge
amount of electrical energy. This is the unique
feature of a nuclear power plant.
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 27
• One kg of uranium is equivalent to 4500
metric tons of high grade coal. That means
complete fission of 1 kg uranium can produce
as much heat as can be produced by complete
combustion of 4500 metric tons high grade
coal.
• To meet up conventional fuel crisis in present
era, nuclear power station can be the most
suitable alternatives.
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 28
DIFFERENT COMPONENTS OF
NUCLEAR POWER STATION
The plant consists of mainly following parts:
1 NUCLEAR REACTOR
2 HEAT EXCHANGER
3 STEAM TURBINE
4 ALTERNATOR
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 29
WORKING
• In nuclear fission, the nuclei of nuclear fuel, such as U235
are bombarded by slow flow of neutrons.
• Uranium is broken, huge heat energy released and also
number of neutrons are emitted during breaking .
• These neutrons cause further fission which needs to be
controlled
• These neutrons should be removed otherwise explosion
can occur .
• Cadmium rods are used because they are good absorber
of neutrons called control rods they are moveable .
• There is also moderator to slow down the neutrons .
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 30
• Heat Exchanger: The heat carried by sodium metal,
is dissipated in water and water is converted to high
pressure steam here.
After releasing heat in water the sodium metal
coolant comes back to the reactor by means of
coolant circulating pump.
• Steam Turbine :In nuclear power plant, the steam
drives the turbine in the same way. After doing its
job, the exhaust steam comes into steam condenser
where it is condensed to water and can be reused.
• Alternator :an electrical generator that converts
mechanical energy to electrical energy in the form of
alternating current
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 31
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 32
CHERNOBYL DISASTER
The worst manmade disaster in human history
Czech Technical University In Prague
23 May 2007
23 May 2007 Czech Technical University in Prague 34
WHERE IS CHERNOBYL?
CHERNOBYL ACCIDENT
• NUCLEAR power plant is located 11 miles from the city
of Chernobyl
• Plant consisted of 4 reactors while 5 and 6 reactors
were under construction each capable of producing
1GW of ELECTRIC POWER
• On Saturday, April 26, 1986, at 1:23:58 a.m. local time,
the fourth reactor of the Chernobyl power plant
known as Chernobyl-4 suffered a catastrophic steam
explosion that resulted in a fire, a series of additional
explosions, and a nuclear meltdown.
• It is regarded as the worst nuclear accident . It
produced radioactive debris that drifted over parts the
western soviet union Scandinavia, UK, and even
eastern USA.
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 35
WHAT HAPPENED?
•Reactor 4 was undergoing a
test to test the backup power
supply in case of a power
loss.
•The power fell too low,
allowing the concentration of
xenon-135 to rise.
•The workers continued the
test, and in order to control
the rising levels of xenon-135,
the control rods were pulled
out.
WHAT HAPPENED?
• The experiment involved shutting down the coolant
pumps, which caused the coolant to rapidly heat up and
boil.
• Pockets of steam formed in the coolant lines. When the
coolant expanded in this particular design, the power
level went up.
• All control rods were ordered to be inserted. As the rods
were inserted, they became deformed and stuck. The
reaction could not be stopped.
• The rods melted and the steam pressure caused an
explosion, which blew a hole in the roof
THE CHERNOBYL REACTOR AFTER THE
EXPLOSION.
23 May 2007 Czech Technical University in Prague 39
DIRECT CASUALTIES
• 5.5 million people still live in contaminated
areas
• 31 people died in 3 months of radiation
poisoning
• 134 emergency workers suffered from acute
radiation sickness
• 25,000 rescue workers died since then of
diseases caused by radiation
• Increased birth defects, miscarriages, and
stillbirths
23 May 2007 Czech Technical University in Prague 40
INDIRECT CASUALTIES
• By the year 2000 there
were 1800 case of
thyroid cancer in
children and
adolescent.
• High number of suicide
and violent death
among Firemen,
policemen, and other
recovery workers
Bibliography
• www.physicspages.com
• www.earthmagazine.com
• www.electricals4u.com
• Radiation detection and measurement by
SAHA
• Christensen book on XRAY PRODUCTION
PANJAB UNIVERSITY 41
23 May 2007 Czech Technical University in Prague 42

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Radiation history

  • 1. RADIATION AND THE HISTORY SALONI CHAWLA
  • 2. CONTENTS • WHAT IS RADIATION ? • TYPES OF RADIATION • DISCOVERY OF X RAYS • DISCOVERY OF RADIOACTIVITY • RADIUM GIRLS • NUCLEAR POWER PLANT • CHERNOBYL ACCIDENT 2PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 3. RADIATION • In general , Radiation is the emission and propagation of energy in the form of waves or Particles . • Eg :Sound ,light, x-rays , UV rays , Heat etc • It can travel through medium or vacuum. • In Physics, we take radiation in the form of electromagnetic waves or particles. • Eg :light, x-rays , UV rays etc 3PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 5. A TOUCH OF QUANTUM MECHANICS • The idea of a radiation being a wave or particle became vague when the WAVE PARTICLE theory came into the scene . • DE BROGLIE hypothesis says that the wave can act as a particle sometimes and also sometimes electrons ,protons etc can behave as waves. • This can be clearly explained by the PHOTOELECTRIC EFFECT . 5PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 6. • De Broglie wavelength is given by Lambda=h/p Or h/mv . • λ is indirectly proportional to velocity and mass • All the macroscopic bodies do have wavelength associated with them but that is too small to observed.eg football • Also Heisenberg uncertainty principle says that when we try to find the position its momentum become undefined and vice versa PANJAB UNIVERSITY 6
  • 7. MORE ABOUT HEISENBERG • The uncertainty principle says that we cannot measure the position (x) and the momentum (p) of a particle with absolute precision. • The more accurately we know one of these values, the less accurately we know the other. • Multiplying together the errors in the measurements of these values has to give a number greater than or equal to half of a constant called "h-bar". • This is equal to Planck's constant (usually written as h) divided by 2π. PANJAB UNIVERSITY 7
  • 8. • One way to think about the uncertainty principle is as an extension of how we see and measure things in the everyday world. • You can read these words because particles of light, photons, have bounced off the screen or paper and reached your eyes. Each photon on that path carries with it some information about the surface it has bounced from, at the speed of light. • Seeing a electron, is not so simple. You might similarly bounce a photon off it and then hope to detect that photon with an instrument. • But chances are that the photon will impart some momentum to the electron as it hits it and change the path of the particle you are trying to measure. Or else, given that quantum particles often move so fast, the electron may no longer be in the place it was when the photon originally bounced off it. PANJAB UNIVERSITY 8
  • 9. CLASSIFICATION  Ionizing Radiation – Higher energy electromagnetic waves (gamma) or heavy particles (beta and alpha). – High enough energy to pull electron from orbit.  Non-ionizing Radiation – Lower energy electromagnetic waves. – Not enough energy to pull electron from orbit, but can excite the electron. 9PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 10. TYPES OF IONISING RADIATION 1.DIRECTLY IONISING RADIATION • Energy > 13.6 ev • Ionisation of an atom • CHARGED • Eg : electrons , protons or alpha ,beta etc 2. INDIRECTLY IONISING RADIATION • Energy <13.6 ev • Two step interaction • UNCHARGED • Eg x rays , gamma rays etc 10PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 11. Can a non ionising radiation be an indirectly ionising one ? FOOD FOR THOUGHT ...
  • 12. X RAYS • Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen , a German physicist discovered X rays on November 8,1895. • He was investigating the behaviour of cathode rays in high energy cathode ray tube • It consists of a glass envelope from as much air as possible was evacuated • He covered the CRT with black paper to ensure that light does not escape and also to block outside light . 12PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 13. • He also darkened the laboratory room . • He found that whenever the cathode ray was organised the unknown type of ray was produced . • This ray caused the fluorescence of a small paper coated with barium platinocyanide . 13PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 14. • This could not be electrons from cathode ray • This could not be the light because it is all dark and cardboard was also there in between them. • There is something that cross the tube when CRT is organised and also penetrate the cardboard • Excitement increased and he kept different things in between them replacing cardboard results were different • Then he held his hand between the tube and the fluorescent screen and the result was ... 14PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 16. • The skeleton of his hand appeared on the screen . • He called it X RAYS, because he was still unknown of this radiation . • This led him to win NOBEL PRIZE IN 1901 16PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 18. BACKGROUND • HENRI BECQUEREL was a scientist who worked on minerals and optics . • He belonged to a family of scientist ,Grandfather discovered piezoelectricity and father phosphoresce. • After discovery of x rays , Becquerel was trying to find out whether these are related to phosphorescence or not . • He took Uranium salts and photographic film covered with black paper and thought if the X-rays were coming out from phosphorescent* material it will cross film and form a image provided we need to give a UV radiations ie Sun. 18PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 19. DISCOVERY • Those days in February , Paris was short of sunshine . • Becquerel had to delay his experiment .He kept the Uranium minerals and film in the drawer . • After week or so he decided to develop film though sunshine was not there • He found that the photographic film had an impression • Even when uranium was not phosphorescent . • He was dumbstruck ,seeing it as he hypothesised that Uranium salts are sources of X-rays . 19PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 21. RESEARCH CONTINUES • To continue the research RUTHERFORD came • His topic of concern was to study the rays given out by URANIUM • He discovered that the rays by Uranium are not X rays they are some other rays . • He gave three rays alpha beta and gamma which comes from some special substance 21PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 23. AND IT DIDNOT STOP! MARIE CURIE : MOTHER OF MODERN PHYSICS • The term radioactivity was actually coined by Marie Curie, who together with her husband Pierre, began investigating the phenomenon recently discovered by Becquerel. • She worked on the uranium ore pitchblende and found that it emitted much more radioactivity than the uranium in the mineral could deliver . • It must contain another highly radioactive element, yet unknown. • In 1898, PIERRE AND MARIE ,discovered two new elements - polonium and radium. • Polonium was named after Marie's homeland, Poland. Radium got its name from the Latin word for ray.. 23PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 24. RADIUM GIRLS • There was a factory of radium watches which hired 70 WOMEN to paint RADIUM DIAL . • Ii was called UNDARK paint made of glue ,water and radium powder . • Women wee taught to shape paintbrush with mouths to maintain a fine point • Some painted their nails and teeth too with that paint • Management and scientist kept themselves away from the exposure but the workers were unaware of it . 24PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 25. • Five Radium Girls sued U.S. Radium in a case that initiated labour safety standards and workers' rights. • Workers suffered from inexplicable bone fractures, bleeding gums and eventually, necrosis of the jaw. • The Radium Girls' case was settled in 1928, putting a swift end to shaping paintbrushes with the mouth and open containers of radium paint. 25PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 26. NUCLEAR POWER PLANT • In nuclear power station, electrical power is generated by nuclear reaction. • Here, heavy radioactive elements such as Uranium (U235) or Thorium (Th232) are subjected to nuclear fission. This fission is done in a special apparatus called as reactor. • FISSION : The nuclei of heavy radioactive atoms are broken into two nearly equal parts. During this breaking ,huge quantity of energy is released. This release of energy is due to mass defect. (mass of final products are reduced than initial ) 26PANJAB UNIVERSITY
  • 27. • It is same as steam power station. Only difference is that, instead of using heat generated due to coal combustion , here heat is generated due to fission • Heat is used to produce steam from water in the boiler. This steam is used to drive a steam turbine. This turbine is the prime mover of the alternator which generates electrical energy. • Very less amount of nuclear fuel can generate huge amount of electrical energy. This is the unique feature of a nuclear power plant. PANJAB UNIVERSITY 27
  • 28. • One kg of uranium is equivalent to 4500 metric tons of high grade coal. That means complete fission of 1 kg uranium can produce as much heat as can be produced by complete combustion of 4500 metric tons high grade coal. • To meet up conventional fuel crisis in present era, nuclear power station can be the most suitable alternatives. PANJAB UNIVERSITY 28
  • 29. DIFFERENT COMPONENTS OF NUCLEAR POWER STATION The plant consists of mainly following parts: 1 NUCLEAR REACTOR 2 HEAT EXCHANGER 3 STEAM TURBINE 4 ALTERNATOR PANJAB UNIVERSITY 29
  • 30. WORKING • In nuclear fission, the nuclei of nuclear fuel, such as U235 are bombarded by slow flow of neutrons. • Uranium is broken, huge heat energy released and also number of neutrons are emitted during breaking . • These neutrons cause further fission which needs to be controlled • These neutrons should be removed otherwise explosion can occur . • Cadmium rods are used because they are good absorber of neutrons called control rods they are moveable . • There is also moderator to slow down the neutrons . PANJAB UNIVERSITY 30
  • 31. • Heat Exchanger: The heat carried by sodium metal, is dissipated in water and water is converted to high pressure steam here. After releasing heat in water the sodium metal coolant comes back to the reactor by means of coolant circulating pump. • Steam Turbine :In nuclear power plant, the steam drives the turbine in the same way. After doing its job, the exhaust steam comes into steam condenser where it is condensed to water and can be reused. • Alternator :an electrical generator that converts mechanical energy to electrical energy in the form of alternating current PANJAB UNIVERSITY 31
  • 33. CHERNOBYL DISASTER The worst manmade disaster in human history Czech Technical University In Prague 23 May 2007
  • 34. 23 May 2007 Czech Technical University in Prague 34 WHERE IS CHERNOBYL?
  • 35. CHERNOBYL ACCIDENT • NUCLEAR power plant is located 11 miles from the city of Chernobyl • Plant consisted of 4 reactors while 5 and 6 reactors were under construction each capable of producing 1GW of ELECTRIC POWER • On Saturday, April 26, 1986, at 1:23:58 a.m. local time, the fourth reactor of the Chernobyl power plant known as Chernobyl-4 suffered a catastrophic steam explosion that resulted in a fire, a series of additional explosions, and a nuclear meltdown. • It is regarded as the worst nuclear accident . It produced radioactive debris that drifted over parts the western soviet union Scandinavia, UK, and even eastern USA. PANJAB UNIVERSITY 35
  • 36. WHAT HAPPENED? •Reactor 4 was undergoing a test to test the backup power supply in case of a power loss. •The power fell too low, allowing the concentration of xenon-135 to rise. •The workers continued the test, and in order to control the rising levels of xenon-135, the control rods were pulled out.
  • 37. WHAT HAPPENED? • The experiment involved shutting down the coolant pumps, which caused the coolant to rapidly heat up and boil. • Pockets of steam formed in the coolant lines. When the coolant expanded in this particular design, the power level went up. • All control rods were ordered to be inserted. As the rods were inserted, they became deformed and stuck. The reaction could not be stopped. • The rods melted and the steam pressure caused an explosion, which blew a hole in the roof
  • 38. THE CHERNOBYL REACTOR AFTER THE EXPLOSION.
  • 39. 23 May 2007 Czech Technical University in Prague 39 DIRECT CASUALTIES • 5.5 million people still live in contaminated areas • 31 people died in 3 months of radiation poisoning • 134 emergency workers suffered from acute radiation sickness • 25,000 rescue workers died since then of diseases caused by radiation • Increased birth defects, miscarriages, and stillbirths
  • 40. 23 May 2007 Czech Technical University in Prague 40 INDIRECT CASUALTIES • By the year 2000 there were 1800 case of thyroid cancer in children and adolescent. • High number of suicide and violent death among Firemen, policemen, and other recovery workers
  • 41. Bibliography • www.physicspages.com • www.earthmagazine.com • www.electricals4u.com • Radiation detection and measurement by SAHA • Christensen book on XRAY PRODUCTION PANJAB UNIVERSITY 41
  • 42. 23 May 2007 Czech Technical University in Prague 42