CH-1020 Chapter Notes - Chapter 21: Breeder Reactor, Spontaneous Emission, Alpha Decay

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Nuclear chemistry: the study of reactions that involve changes in the nuclei of atoms. Nuclear fusion: a nuclear reaction in which subatomic particles or atomic nuclei collide with each other at very high speeds and fuse together, forming more massive nuclei and releasing energy. Positron: a particle with the mass of an electron but with a positive charge. Antimatter: particles that are the charge opposites of normal subatomic particles. Belt of stability: the region on a graph of number of neutrons versus number of protons that includes all stable nuclei. Radioactive decay: the spontaneous disintegration of unstable particles accompanied by the release of radiation. Positron emission: the spontaneous emission of a positron from a neutron-poor nucleus. Electron capture: a nuclear reaction in which a neutron-poor nucleus draws in one of its surrounding electrons, which transforms a proton in the nucleus into a neutron. Alpha decay: a nuclear reaction in which an unstable nuclide spontaneously emits an alpha particle.

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