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Student Exploration: Nuclear Reactions

The document is a student exploration activity about nuclear reactions. It provides background information and vocabulary about topics like fusion, fission, and particle accelerators. It then guides students through an interactive simulation of the proton-proton chain reaction that powers the sun. The activity asks students to observe proton collisions in the simulator and write the equation for the reaction, which results in the emission of a positron and the formation of deuterium with an energy release of 0.42 MeV.

Uploaded by

Bennie Cook
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13% found this document useful (15 votes)
11K views4 pages

Student Exploration: Nuclear Reactions

The document is a student exploration activity about nuclear reactions. It provides background information and vocabulary about topics like fusion, fission, and particle accelerators. It then guides students through an interactive simulation of the proton-proton chain reaction that powers the sun. The activity asks students to observe proton collisions in the simulator and write the equation for the reaction, which results in the emission of a positron and the formation of deuterium with an energy release of 0.42 MeV.

Uploaded by

Bennie Cook
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 4

Name: Date:

Student Exploration: Nuclear Reactions

[Note to teachers and students: This Gizmo was designed as a follow-up to the Nuclear Decay
Gizmo. We recommend doing that activity before trying this one.]

Vocabulary: chain reaction, CNO cycle, catalyst, deuterium, electron volt, fission, fusion,
isotope, nuclear reaction, positron, positron emission, proton-proton chain

Prior Knowledge Questions (Do these BEFORE using the Gizmo.)


The chart to the right gives the isotope
name, element name, number of protons, and Isotope Protons Neutrons
number of neutrons of three isotopes. Hydrogen-1 1 0
1. What do you notice about the isotope Carbon-12 6 6
number and the sum of protons and Uranium-235 92 143
neutrons?
They are the same.

2. The element symbol for uranium-238 is . This means U-238 has a total mass of 238
and contains 92 protons. Write the element symbols for the isotopes in the table:

Hydrogen-1 Carbon-12 Uranium-235


1 12 235

1 H 6C 92 U
Gizmo Warm-up
The Nuclear Reactions Gizmo simulates a particle accelerator.
Particle accelerators speed up atoms to very high velocities, then
crash the atoms together with enough energy to cause changes called
nuclear reactions. There are three particle beams available in this
Gizmo, protons, neutrons, and helium-3 nuclei.

1. Click Fire Proton to engage the first particle beam.

What happens? Creates


energy

2. Colliding particles don’t always react. Click Reset, and then click Fire neutron.

A. Does a reaction occur? No

2019
B. Explain:

2019
Get the Gizmo ready:
Activity A:
 Click Reset.
Proton-proton
 Be sure Proton-proton is selected in the Reaction
chain
menu.

Introduction: All stars turn hydrogen into helium in a process called nuclear fusion. Stars
perform this process in different ways. In stars like our sun, the proton-proton chain is used.
This reaction requires temperatures greater than 4,000,000 K to occur.

Question: How does the process of fusion turn hydrogen into helium in stars?

1. Observe: Click Fire proton and observe. What happens after the proton merges into the

nucleus?

This is a form of nuclear decay called positron emission. During positron emission, a
proton decays into a neutron. In this process, it emits a positron, which is a nearly massless
antimatter particle with a positive charge.

2. Observe: Click Reset and click Fire proton. Observe what happens. Many subatomic
particles appear frequently in nuclear reactions. Their element symbols are given
below:

Neutron Positron Electron Proton

(Neutrinos are also produced but are beyond the scope of this Gizmo.)

Click Reset and click Fire proton. Turn on the Write equation checkbox. Based on what
you have observed, write in the equation for this reaction in the Gizmo and below.

A. Turn on Show equation. Was your predicted equation correct?

Correct your equation if necessary. The resulting H-2 isotope is called deuterium.

B. Emitted energy is reported in megaelectron volts (MeV), where one MeV is equal to

one million electron volts. How much energy is emitted in this reaction?

(Activity A continued on next page)


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