Science, asked by pravin3103, 10 months ago

Beta particles are a stream of high energy .........?

Answers

Answered by 1111kainatanjum
4

Answer:

Beta radiation consists of a stream of beta particles (electrons). They are created in the nucleus of radioactive atoms when a neutron is converted into a proton and an electron. Gamma radiation consists of high energy photons similar to X rays, but with a higher energy.

Answered by zumba12
0

High speed is the answer.

Explanation:

  • Beta particles (β) are high-energy, high-speed electrons (β-) or positrons (β+) that are ejected from the nucleus with the aid of using a few radionuclides at some stage in a shape of radioactive decay known as beta decay.
  • Beta-decay takes place normally in nuclei with too many neutrons to obtain stability.
  • There are types of beta decay, electron decay (β− decay), and positron decay (β+ decay).
  • In a nuclear reactor takes place mainly the β− decay, due to the fact the not unusual place function of the fission merchandise is extra neutrons (see Nuclear Stability).

A risky fission fragment with the extra neutrons undergoes β− decay, in which the neutron is transformed right into a proton, an electron, and an electron antineutrino.

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