| Neutron |
| Classification |
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| Properties |
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| Mass: |
940 MeV |
| Electric Charge: |
0 C |
| Spin: |
1/2 |
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In physics, the neutron is a subatomic particle with no net electric
charge and a mass of 940 MeV (very slightly more
than a proton). Its spin
is 1/2. The nucleus of most atoms
(all except the most common isotope of Hydrogen, which consists of a single proton only) consists of protons and neutrons. Outside the nucleus, neutrons
are unstable and have a half-life of about 15 minutes, decaying by emitting an
electron and antineutrino to become a
proton. The same decay method (beta decay) occurs in some nuclei. Particles
inside the nucleus are typically resonances between neutrons and protons, which transform into one another by the emission and
absorption of pions. A neutron is classified as a baryon, and consists of two down quarks and one up quark. The neutron's antimatter equivalent is the antineutron.
The characteristic of neutrons which most differentiates them from other common subatomic particles is the fact that they are uncharged. This property of neutrons delayed their
discovery, makes them very penetrating, makes it impossible to observe them directly, and makes them very important as agents in
nuclear change.
Although atoms in their normal state are also uncharged, they are ten thousand times larger than a neutron and consist of a
complex system of negatively charged electrons widely spaced around a positively
charged nucleus. Charged particles (such as protons, electrons, or
alpha particles) and electromagnetic radiations (such as gamma rays) lose energy
in passing through matter. They exert electric forces which ionize atoms of the material through which they pass. The energy
taken up in ionization equals the energy lost by the charged particle, which slows down, or by the gamma ray, which is absorbed.
The neutron, however, is unaffected by such forces; it is affected only by the very short-range strong nuclear force which comes into play when the neutron comes
very close indeed to an atomic nucleus. Consequently a free neutron goes on its way unchecked until it makes a "head-on"
collision with an atomic nucleus. Since nuclei have a very small cross
section, such collisions occur but rarely and the neutron travels a long way before colliding.
In the case of a collision of the elastic type, the ordinary
laws of momentum apply as they do in the elastic collision of billiard balls. If
the nucleus that is struck is heavy, it acquires relatively little speed, but if it is a proton, which is approximately equal in
mass to the neutron, it is projected forward with a large fraction of the original speed of the neutron, which is itself
correspondingly slowed. Secondary projectiles resulting from these collisions may be detected, for they are charged and produce
ionization.
The uncharged nature of the neutron makes it not only difficult to detect but difficult to control. Charged particles can be
accelerated, decelerated, or deflected by electric or magnetic fields which have no effect on neutrons. Furthermore, free neutrons
(neutron radiation) can be obtained only from nuclear
disintegrations; there is no natural supply. The only means we have of controlling free neutrons is to put nuclei in their way so
that they will be slowed and deflected or absorbed by collisions. These effects are of great practical importance in nuclear reactors and nuclear weapons.
Discovery
In 1930 Walther Bothe and H.
Becker in Germany found that if the very energetic natural alpha particles from polonium fell on certain of the light
elements, specifically beryllium, boron,
or lithium, an unusually penetrating radiation was produced. At first this radiation
was thought to be gamma radiation although it was more penetrating than any gamma rays known, and the details of experimental
results were very difficult to interpret on this basis. The next important contribution was reported in 1932 by Irène Joliot-Curie and F. Joliot in
Paris. They showed that if this unknown radiation fell on paraffin or any other hydrogen-containing compound it ejected
protons of very high energy. This was not in itself inconsistent with the assumed gamma ray nature of the new radiation, but
detailed quantitative analysis of the data became increasingly difficult to reconcile with such an hypothesis. Finally (later in
1932) the physicist James Chadwick in England performed a series of experiments showing that the gamma ray hypothesis was untenable. He suggested that in
fact the new radiation consisted of uncharged particles of approximately the mass of the proton, and he performed a series of experiments verifying his suggestion. Such uncharged particles were eventually
called neutrons, apparently from the Latin root for
neutral and the Greek ending -on (by imitation of
electron and proton).
Current developments
The existence of stable clusters of four neutrons, or tetraneutrons, has
been hypothesised by a team led by Francisco-Miguel Marqués at the CNRS Laboratory for Nuclear Physics based on observations of the disintegration of
beryllium-14 nuclei. This is particularly interesting, because current theory
suggests that these clusters should not be stable, and therefore not exist.
See also particle physics, subatomic particle, list of
particles, chemistry, neutron star.
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