someth1ng
Retired Nov '14
Okay, the problem I have is that in my exam, I was asked in the multiple choice:
This is roughly what the question was:
"Why is Uranium-238 radioactive?"
The two possible answers I saw were:
1. The proton-neutron ratio
2. The mass of the nuclei was too large
I put in 2 as my answer on the grounds that:
• Uranium has no non-radioactive isotopes so it can't be concluded that the ratio is caused by radioactivity.
• All elements >83 in atomic number are radioactive and higher atomic number generally equates to larger mass. The only change between 83 onward against under 83 is the mass but the ratio is the same.
• After doing some research: two main factors contribute to radioactivity: the size of the nuclei and the proton-neutron ratio. In Uranium, this would be the size since if you consider the size, a 1.6 ratio is reasonable for the magnitude of the protons in the nuclei.
Thoughts? I personally think both answers can be considered wrong.
This is roughly what the question was:
"Why is Uranium-238 radioactive?"
The two possible answers I saw were:
1. The proton-neutron ratio
2. The mass of the nuclei was too large
I put in 2 as my answer on the grounds that:
• Uranium has no non-radioactive isotopes so it can't be concluded that the ratio is caused by radioactivity.
• All elements >83 in atomic number are radioactive and higher atomic number generally equates to larger mass. The only change between 83 onward against under 83 is the mass but the ratio is the same.
• After doing some research: two main factors contribute to radioactivity: the size of the nuclei and the proton-neutron ratio. In Uranium, this would be the size since if you consider the size, a 1.6 ratio is reasonable for the magnitude of the protons in the nuclei.
Thoughts? I personally think both answers can be considered wrong.
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