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Radioactive decay and half-life - CCEAStable and unstable nuclei

Radioactivity was first noticed by French physicist, Henri Becquerel, in 1896, when he observed that some photographic plates which had been stored close to a uranium compound had become partly exposed or 鈥榝ogged鈥.

Part of Combined ScienceRadioactivity

Stable and unstable nuclei

Graph showing the rate of decay with he number of protons against the number of neutrons. Purple line on the graph shows the stability line and the green line is N=Z.

Nuclei with too many, or too few, neutrons do exist naturally but are unstable and will disintegrate (or decay) by emitting radiation.

This is called radioactive decay.

It is important to realise that radioactive nuclei disintegrate:

  • spontaneously;
  • and randomly.

This means that the process of radioactive decay can not be speeded up, slowed down or influenced by artificial means (spontaneous decay).

It also means that we cannot tell when a particular unstable nucleus will decay (random decay).

Key points

  • Some nuclei are unstable.
  • They disintegrate, emitting radiation randomly, and spontaneously.
  • Such nuclei are said to be radioactive.
  • Radioactive decay occurs when an unstable nucleus becomes more stable by emitting radiation.