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alpha particle |
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alpha particlePositively charged (2+), high-energy particle emitted from the nucleus of a radioactive atom. It is one of the products of the spontaneous disintegration of radioactive elements (see radioactivity) such as radium and thorium, and is identical to the nucleus of a helium atom (4He) - that is, it consists of two protons and two neutrons. The process of emission, alpha decay, transforms one element into another, decreasing the atomic number by two and the atomic mass by four. Plutonium-239 (239Pu) is an example of a material that emits alpha particles. Because of their large mass, alpha particles have a short range of only a few centimetres in air. They have a low penetrating power and can be stopped by a sheet of paper or aluminium. They have a strongly ionizing effect (see ionizing radiation) on the molecules that they strike, and are therefore capable of damaging living cells. Alpha particles are deflected by magnetic and electric fields. |
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| [alpha]] is the propagation direction of the alpha particle,
followed by ([alpha], n) reactions, can lead to false asymmetries in the
CsI detectors, estimated at the 2 X [10. Each of those putative atoms of element 115 disintegrated within
fractions of a second by spontaneously ejecting an alpha particle, which
contains two protons and two neutrons. 2 MeV (an acknowledged overestimate because of
the infinitely thick source geometry), we calculated a radiation dose
rate averaged over a 50-[micro]m tissue thickness surrounding the
implant (adequate to capture all of the alpha particle energy emitted by
both uranium- and thorium-series isotopes) to be 4. |
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