University Physics with Modern Physics, Volume 2 (Chs. 21-37); Mastering Physics with Pearson eText -- ValuePack Access Card (14th Edition)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9780134265414
Author: Hugh D. Young, Roger A. Freedman
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Question
Chapter 43, Problem 43.8DQ
To determine
Whether the interior of old stars is hotter or cooler than that of younger stars.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
41 O A star converts all its hydrogen to helium, achieving a
100% helium composition. Next it converts the helium to carbon
via the triple-alpha process,
"He + He + He → 12C + 7.27 MeV.
The mass of the star is 4.6 x 102 kg, and it generates energy at the
rate of 5.3 x 1030 W. How long will it take to convert all the helium
to carbon at this rate?
A star with a large helium abundance can burn helium in
the reaction He + ¿He + ¿He → ?C. What is the
Q-value for this reaction?
Scientists can determine the age of ancient objects by the method of radiocarbon dating. The bombardment of the upper atmosphere by cosmic rays converts nitrogen to a radioactive isotope of carbon, 14C, with a half-life of about 5730 years. Vegetation absorbs carbon dioxide through the atmosphere and
animal life assimilates ¹4C through food chains. When a plant or animal dies, it stops replacing its carbon and the amount of 14C begins to decrease through radioactive decay. Therefore the level of radioactivity must also decay exponentially. A parchment fragment was discovered that had about 75% as much
14C radioactivity as does plant material on earth today. Estimate the age of the parchment. (Round your answer to the nearest whole number.)
yr
Need Help? Watch It
Additional Materials
THER
Chapter 43 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics, Volume 2 (Chs. 21-37); Mastering Physics with Pearson eText -- ValuePack Access Card (14th Edition)
Ch. 43.1 - Prob. 43.1TYUCh. 43.2 - Rank the following nuclei in order from largest to...Ch. 43.3 - Prob. 43.3TYUCh. 43.4 - Prob. 43.4TYUCh. 43.5 - Prob. 43.5TYUCh. 43.6 - Prob. 43.6TYUCh. 43.7 - Prob. 43.7TYUCh. 43.8 - Prob. 43.8TYUCh. 43 - Prob. 43.1DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.2DQ
Ch. 43 - Prob. 43.3DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.4DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.5DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.6DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.7DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.8DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.9DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.10DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.11DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.12DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.13DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.14DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.15DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.16DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.17DQCh. 43 - The most common radium isotope found on earth,...Ch. 43 - Prob. 43.19DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.20DQCh. 43 - Prob. 43.1ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.2ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.3ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.4ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.5ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.6ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.7ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.8ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.9ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.10ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.11ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.12ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.13ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.14ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.15ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.16ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.17ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.18ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.19ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.20ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.21ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.22ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.23ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.24ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.25ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.26ECh. 43 - Measurements on a certain isotope tell you that...Ch. 43 - Prob. 43.28ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.29ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.30ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.31ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.32ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.33ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.34ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.35ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.36ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.37ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.38ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.39ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.40ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.41ECh. 43 - Energy from Nuclear Fusion. Calculate the energy...Ch. 43 - Prob. 43.43ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.44ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.45ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.46ECh. 43 - Prob. 43.47PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.48PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.49PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.50PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.51PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.52PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.53PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.54PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.55PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.56PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.57PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.58PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.59PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.60PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.61PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.62PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.63PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.64PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.65PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.66PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.67PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.68PCh. 43 - DATA Your company develops radioactive isotopes...Ch. 43 - Prob. 43.70PCh. 43 - Prob. 43.71CPCh. 43 - Prob. 43.72CPCh. 43 - Prob. 43.73PPCh. 43 - Prob. 43.74PPCh. 43 - Prob. 43.75PPCh. 43 - Prob. 43.76PPCh. 43 - Prob. 43.77PP
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Enter the correct nuclide symbol in each open tan rectangle in Figure P43.25, which shows the sequences of decays in the natural radioactive series starting with the long-lived isotope uranium-235 and ending with the stable nucleus lead-207. Figure P43.25arrow_forward(a) If the average molecular mass of compounds in food is 50.0 g, how many molecules are mere in 1.00 kg at food? (b) How many ion pairs are created in 1.00 kg of food, if it is exposed to 1000 Sv and it takes 32.0 eV to create an ion pair? (c) Find the ratio of ion pairs to molecules. (d) If these ion pairs recombine into a distribution of 2000 new compounds, how many parts per billion is each?arrow_forward(a) Calculate the energy released in the a decay of 238U. (b) What fraction of the mass at a single 238U is destroyed in the decay? The mass of 234Th is 234.043593 u. (c) Although the fractional mass loss is laws for a single nucleus, it is difficult to observe for an entire macroscopic sample of uranium. Why is this?arrow_forward
- Another series of nuclear reactions that can produce energy in the interior of stars is the carbon cycle first proposed by Hans Bethe in 1939, leading to his Nobel Prize in Physics in 1967. This cycle is most efficient when the central temperature in a star is above 1.6 x 10^7 K. Because the temperature at the center of the Sun is only 1.5 x 10^7 K, the following cycle produces less than 10% of the Sun’s energy. (a) A high-energy proton is absorbed by 12C. Another nucleus, A, is produced in the reaction, along with a gamma ray. Identify nucleus A. (b) Nucleus A decays through positron emission to form nucleus B. Identify nucleus B. (c) Nucleus B absorbs a proton to produce nucleus C and a gamma ray. Identify nucleus C. (d) Nucleus C absorbs a proton to produce nucleus D and a gamma ray. Identify nucleus D. (e) Nucleus D decays through positron emission to produce nucleus E. Identify nucleus E. (f) Nucleus E absorbs a proton to produce nucleus F plus an alpha particle. Identify nucleus…arrow_forwardFor a fusion reaction, at which temperature T do you expect the optimal reaction rate to approximately occur? In the expressions below EG is the Gamow energy of the reaction and k is the Boltzmann constant. Select one: O a. T O b. T: O c. T d. T = Oe. T - - = = EG 100k 10EG k EG 10k EG k 100 EG karrow_forwardq9arrow_forward
- The fission process in a reactor is represented by the equation below: U235 + n1 = La148+ Br85 + 3n1. If the elements in the above equation have the following atomic mass units (a.m.u ): U235 =235.124, n1 =1.009 La148= 147.96 and Br85 = 84.938. Given that mass of 1 a.m.u =1.67 x 10 -27 kg and 1.619 x 10-19 J = eV. 235g of Uranium contains 6.03 x 1023 atoms. a.Calculate the mass of Uranium atom that will be converted into heat energy by the fission process. b. Calculate the total amount of energy in MeV released during the fission process c.Calculate the amount of energy in J that can be obtained from one kilogramme of Uranium during a fission processarrow_forwardA "mad" scientist attempts to take a sample of Mercury-199 and bombard it with neutrons. The reaction creates a proton and Gold-199. His joy is short-lived when in a few days the radioactive Gold-199 reverts back to Mercury-199 emitting a single particle. What is the emitted particle? 1999 Au 199 ¹20Hg+? 80 000 0 a beta (-) particle ß- a proton; H+ an alpha particle; a a neutron; nºarrow_forwardHow much energy in kJ is released to form one mole of 75As from protons, electrons, and neutrons if the nucleus has a mass of 74.921594 amu? The masses of the proton, electron and neutron are 1.00728 amu, 0.000549 amu and 1.00867 amu, respectively. -3.15e10 kJ/mol -6.31e10 kJ/mol -6.31e13 kJ/mol 3.15e13 kJ/molarrow_forward
- Another set of reactions that result in the fusing ofhydrogen into helium in the Sun and especially in hotter starsis called the carbon cycle. It is12C + 1H → 13N + γ,13N → 13C + e+ + ve,13C + 1H → 14N + γ,14N + 1H → 15O + γ,15O → 15N + e+ + ve,15N + 1H → 12C + 4He.Write down the overall effect of the carbon cycle (as wasdone for the proton-proton cycle in2e− + 41H → 4 He + 2ve + 6γ ). Note the number of protons ( 1H ) required and assume that the positrons ( e+ ) annihilate electrons to form more γ rays.arrow_forwardA "mad" scientist attempts to take a sample of Mercury-199 and bombard it with neutrons. The reaction creates a proton and Gold-199. His joy is short-lived when in a few days the radioactive Gold-199 reverts back to Mercury-199 emitting a single particle. What is the emitted particle? 199 79 O O → 199 80Hg+? a beta (-) particle ß- a proton; H+ an alpha particle; a a neutron; nºarrow_forwardAnother series of nuclear reactions that can produce energy in the interior of stars is the cycle described below. This cycle is most efficient when the central temperature in a star is above 1.6 x107 K. Because the temperature at the center of the Sun is only 1.5 x 107 K, the following cycle produces less than 10% of the Sun’s energy. (a) A high - energy proton is absorbed by 12C. Another nucleus, A, is produced in the reaction, along with a gamma ray. Identify nucleus A. (b) Nucleus A decays through positron emission to form nucleus B. Identify nucleus B. (c) Nucleus B absorbs a proton to produce nucleus C and a gamma ray. Identify nucleus C . (d) Nucleus C absorbs a proton to produce nucleus D and a gamma ray. Identify nucleus D. (e) Nucleus D decays through positron emission to produce nucleus E. Identify nucleus E. (f ) Nucleus E absorbs a proton to produce nucleus F plus an alpha particle. What is nucleus F? Note: If nucleus F is not 12C— that is, the nucleus you started with —…arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Modern PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781111794378Author:Raymond A. Serway, Clement J. Moses, Curt A. MoyerPublisher:Cengage LearningCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781305952300Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning
- College PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage LearningPrinciples of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...PhysicsISBN:9781337553292Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage Learning
Modern Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781111794378
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Clement J. Moses, Curt A. Moyer
Publisher:Cengage Learning
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781305952300
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern ...
Physics
ISBN:9781337553292
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning