Chemistry, asked by vaibhavchavan2378, 9 months ago

39. Emission of positron is found in​

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Answered by subhrajena189
1

Answer:

The positron is a type of beta particle (β+), the other beta particle being the electron (β−) emitted from the β− decay of a nucleus. Because positron emission decreases proton number relative to neutron number, positron decay happens typically in large "proton-rich" radionuclides.

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Answered by thanvic16pgi6010047
0
The positron is a type of beta particle (β+), the other beta particle being the electron (β−) emitted from the β− decay of a nucleus. Because positron emission decreases proton number relative to neutron number, positron decay happens typically in large "proton-rich" radionuclides.
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