The photograph shown was taken during a meeting of the Deutsche Bunsen-Gesellschaft (German Bunsen Society) in 1932 - Leaving Cert Physics - Question 11 - 2021
Question 11
The photograph shown was taken during a meeting of the Deutsche Bunsen-Gesellschaft (German Bunsen Society) in 1932.
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Worked Solution & Example Answer:The photograph shown was taken during a meeting of the Deutsche Bunsen-Gesellschaft (German Bunsen Society) in 1932 - Leaving Cert Physics - Question 11 - 2021
Step 1
Write the nuclear equation for this event.
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Answer
The nuclear equation representing the interaction where an alpha particle interacts with a beryllium-9 nucleus can be written as:
Be9+He2→C12+n0
Step 2
Calculate the increase in kinetic energy during this event.
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Answer
To find the increase in kinetic energy, we can apply the formula:
E=mc2
Conversion between atomic mass unit (a.m.u) and kilograms (kg).
Calculate mass defect from the difference in mass before and after the reaction.
Convert mass defect to energy using the conversion 1exta.m.u=1.93×10−13extJ.
This will give the increase in kinetic energy.
Step 3
A G-M tube and a solid-state detector have the same function. What is this function?
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Both the G-M tube and solid-state detector are primarily used to detect (ionising) radiation.
Step 4
Describe, with the aid of a labelled diagram, the principle of operation of a detector of this sort.
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A labelled diagram would show:
Gas/anode: Ionization takes place when ionizing radiation enters the tube.
Semiconductor/charged gold electroscope: Indicates the presence of charge.
Electron-hole pair: Created due to ionization.
Current: Generated due to the movement of charge carriers, leading to a measurable output.
Step 5
Describe with the aid of a labelled diagram the gold foil experiment.
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Answer
In the gold foil experiment, alpha particles were directed at a thin foil of gold. The observations helped reveal the atomic structure. A labelled diagram would include:
Alpha source
Gold foil
Zinc sulfide screen: Flashes of light recorded.
Observation: Most particles passed through, some were deflected at large angles.
Step 6
What observations were made during the experiment?
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Answer
Observations noted:
Most particles passed straight through.
Some were slightly deflected.
A few went almost straight back, indicating a dense nucleus.
Step 7
What did Rutherford conclude about the structure of the atom?
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Rutherford concluded that the atom consists of a small, dense nucleus surrounded mostly by empty space where electrons orbit.
Step 8
How did Niels Bohr improve Rutherford’s model to explain emission line spectra?
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Answer
Bohr proposed that electrons occupy quantized energy levels, which restricts their orbits. He introduced:
Electrons can only exist in specific energy levels.
When electrons move between levels, they emit or absorb photons with energy corresponding to the difference between those levels:
Ephoton=hf=En−En′
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