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Student Book answers P7 Radioactivity

P7.1 Atoms and radiation


Question Answer Marks Guidance
number
1a radiation from U consists = particles, radiation from lamp = 1
electromagnetic waves,
radiation from U is ionising, radiation from lamp is non-ionising 1
1b radioactive atoms have unstable nuclei whereas atoms in lamp filament 1
do not,
decay of radioactive atom cannot be stopped whereas atoms in lamp 1
filament stop emitting radiation when
filament current switched off
2ai alpha 1
2 a ii beta or gamma 1
2b gamma 1
3 atoms have unstable nuclei, 1
these nuclei become stable by emitting radiation 1
4a substance emits (ionising) radiation 1
so radioactive 1
4b paper stopped most radiation from substance reaching Geiger counter, 1
paper absorbed radiation, 1
so must be alpha radiation 1

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Student Book answers P7 Radioactivity

P7.2 The discovery of the nucleus


Question Answer Marks Guidance
number
1 nucleus much smaller than atom, 1
nucleus positively charged, 1
mass of atom concentrated in nucleus 1
all positive charge of atom concentrated in nucleus 1
2a B 1
2b A: attracted by nucleus 1
C: unaffected by nucleus 1
D: repelled in wrong direction by nucleus 1
3ai atoms not indivisible, 1
atoms contain negatively charged electrons 1
3 a ii any two from: 2
 nuclear: all positive charge concentrated in nucleus much
smaller than atom, plum pudding: positive charge spread out
throughout atom,
 nuclear: most mass concentrated in nucleus, plum pudding:
mass spread out throughout atom
 nuclear: most atom empty space, plum pudding: no empty
space
3b nuclear model explains why some alpha particles scattered through 1
large angles,
in plum pudding model such large-angle scattering should not be 1
observed
4a similarity: proton and neutron have about same mass (or both found in 1
nucleus)
difference: proton is charged whereas neutron has no charge 1

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Student Book answers P7 Radioactivity

Question Answer Marks Guidance


number
4b He nucleus contains 4 (neutrons + protons) whereas H nucleus only 1
contains one = a single proton,
2 protons particles in He nucleus because He nucleus has twice as 1
much charge as H nucleus,
∴other 2 particles in He nucleus are neutrons 1

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Student Book answers P7 Radioactivity

P7.3 Changes in the nucleus


Question Answer Marks Guidance
number
1a 6p+6n 1
1b 27 p + 33 n 1
1c 92 p + 143 n 1
1d 4p 1
10 n 1
2a 92 p + 146 n 1
2b 90 p + 144 n 2
2c 91 p + 143 n 2
92U  90Th  2 
3a 235 231 4 2

29 Cu  30 Zn 1
3b 64 64 0 2

83Bi  84 Po  1
4 210 210 0 3

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Student Book answers P7 Radioactivity

P7.4 More about alpha, beta, and gamma radiation


Question Answer Marks Guidance
number
1a stops irradiation of nearby people or objects 1
1b alpha 1
1c α, β 1
2ai gamma 1
2 a ii alpha 1
2 a iii beta 1
2bi gamma 1
2 b ii alpha 1
3a can knock electrons from atoms, 1
this ionisation damages cell (or kills cell or affects genes in cell which 1
can be passed on if
cell generates more cells)
3b (place Geiger tube in a holder so it can be moved horizontally,) move 1
tube so end close to source and Geiger counter detects radiation from
source, 1
move tube gradually away from source until count rate decreases 1
significantly,
distance from end of tube to source is range of α radiation from source
4 very little γ radiation absorbed by foil, it would all pass straight through 1
so thickness of foil would not affect detector reading 1

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Student Book answers P7 Radioactivity

P7.5 Activity and half-life


Question Answer Marks Guidance
number
1a average time for no. nuclei in sample of isotope to halve 1
1b 190 cpm 1
2ai 8 mg 1
4 milligrams (= 2 )
2 a ii 8 mg 1
1 milligram (= 3 )
2
2b 5% of 8 mg = 0.4 mg 1
8 mg 1
so mass < 0.5 mg (= 4 ) after 4 half-lives, 1
2
time taken ∴ just over 4 half-lives → about 65 hours
3ai 160 million atoms 1
3 a ii 1 1 1
32 (= 25 )
3 a iii 320 million 1
number remaining =
25 1
= 10 million atoms
3b 320 cpm 1
after 4 half-lives, count rate = initial count rate of 24 = < 37.5 cpm
so time taken to drop to 40 cpm from start < 180 minutes (4 half-lives) 1
4 after 2 half-lives count rate due to wood = 25% of initial count rate, 1
∴ the wood is 11 200 years old (= 2 × 5 600 yrs) 1

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