The half-life of a radioactive nuclide is 100 hours. The fraction of original activity that will remain after 150 hours would be:
1.
2.
3.
4.
1. | \(\beta^{+}, ~\alpha, ~\beta^{-}\) | 2. | \(\beta^{-}, ~\alpha, ~\beta^{+}\) |
3. | \(\alpha, ~\beta^{-},~\beta^{+}\) | 4. | \(\alpha, ~\beta^{+},~\beta^{-}\) |
A nucleus with mass number \(240\) breaks into fragments each of mass number \(120.\) The binding energy per nucleon of unfragmented nuclei is \(7.6~\text{MeV}\) while that of fragments is \(8.5~\text{MeV}.\) The total gain in the binding energy in the process is:
1. \(804~\text{MeV}\)
2. \(216~\text{MeV}\)
3. \(0.9~\text{MeV}\)
4. \(9.4~\text{MeV}\)
The graph shows the exponential decay of a radioactive specie. The number of nuclei decayed after time t is:
Graph gives the variation of potential energy of a pair of nucleons as a function of their separation, r. From the graph it can be concluded that the force between nucleons is attractive for distances:
1. Less than ro
2. Greater than ro
3. Less than
4. Less than
Graph given below shows the variation of binding energy per nucleon, Ebn as a function of mass number. For nuclei with mass number A such that, 30 < A < 170, Ebn is almost constant because nuclear forces are:
1. Short-ranged
2. Medium-ranged
3. Long-ranged
4. None of the above
Which one of the following is incorrect?
1. | A chemical equation is balanced in the sense that the number of atoms of each element is the same on both sides of the equation. |
2. | The number of atoms of each element is not necessarily conserved in a nuclear reaction. |
3. | The number of protons and the number of neutrons are conserved in each nuclear reaction. |
4. | Mass-energy interconversion takes place only in nuclear reactions and never in the chemical reaction. |
Tritium has a half-life of 12.5 y undergoing beta decay. What fraction of a sample of pure tritium will remain undecayed after 25 y?
The half-life of undergoing -decay is years. What is the activity of the 1g sample of ?
1.
2.
3.
4.
The energy required in \(\text{MeV/c}^2 \) to separate \({ }_8^{16} \mathrm{O}\) into its constituents is:
(Given: mass defect for \({ }_8^{16} \mathrm{O}=0.13691~ \text{amu}\))
1. | \(127.5\) | 2. | \(120.0\) |
3. | \(222.0\) | 4. | \(119.0\) |