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Ionising Radiation

Revision as of 08:49, 8 March 2019 by NRJC (talk | contribs) (Ionising Atoms)

Key Stage 3

Meaning

The hazard symbol for ionising radiation.

Ionising Radiation is radiation which can cause atoms to lose electrons and become ions.

About Ionising Radiation

Ionising radiation damages living organisms.
Ionising radiation may kill cells by damaging the parts inside them, particularly the DNA.
Ionising radiation can cause the appearance of burns to the skin. A high enough dose of Ionising Radiation can cause instant death.

Key Stage 4

Meaning

Ionising Radiation is radiation emitted from the nucleus of an atom which can cause other atoms to lose electrons and become ions.

About Ionising Radiation

The units of exposure to ionising radiation are the Sievert which is 1 Joule of energy from ionising radiation being absorbed by 1 kilogram of flesh.

In Nuclear Physics there are three types of ionising radiation:

Ionising Atoms

AlphaIonise.png
When an alpha particle interacts with an atom the alpha particle can remove one or two electrons to ionise the atom.
BetaIonise.png
When a Beta minus particle interacts with an atom the beta minus particle can pass on some of its kinetic energy to an electron in the outer shell causing the electron to escape ionising the atom.
GammaIonise.png
When a gamma-ray interacts with an atom the gammarray is absorbed by an electron in the outer shell causing the electron to escape ionising the atom.
NeutronIonise.png
Neutron radiation is referred to as indirectly ionising because it does not affect the electrons orbiting an atom but it can be absorbed by a nucleus making it unstable and causing it to release a gamma-ray.

Ionising Radiation and Cancer

Exposure to ionising radiation is a risk factor in cancer because ionising radiation can cause DNA molecules to break. When the cell tries to repair the DNA it can make mistakes called mutations. If this mutation tells the cell to replicate constantly then this becomes cancer.