472 8 Nuclear Physics – II
where the first term on the right hand side denotes the absorption rate of neu-
trons in^23 Na, and if it is assumed that each neutron thus absorbed produces a
(^24) Na atom, then this also represents the production rate of (^24) Na. The second
term represents the decay rate, so that dQ/dtdenotes the rate of change of
atoms of^24 Na.
The saturation activity is obtained by setting dQ/dt= 0. Then
λQs=φΣa=φσa
Noρ
A
1011 × 536 × 10 −^27 × 6. 02 × 1023 × 0. 97
23
= 1. 36 × 109 s−^1
8.76 At equilibrium number of^198 Au atoms is
Qs=
φσaNoWT 1 / 2
0. 0693 A
=
1012 × 98 × 10 −^24 × 6. 02 × 1023 × 0. 1 × 2. 7 × 3 , 600
0. 693 × 197
= 4. 2 × 1014
Activity=Qsλ=
Qs× 0. 693
T 1 / 2
=
4. 2 × 1014 × 0. 693
2. 7 × 3 , 600
= 3 × 1012 s−^1
8.77 Consider a binary fission, that is a heavy nucleus of mass numberAand atomic
numberZbreaking into two equal fragments each characterized byA 2 andZ 2.
In this problem the only terms in the mass formula which are relevant are the
Coulomb term and the surface tension term.
M(A,Z)=
acZ^2
A^1 /^3
+asA^2 /^3
Energy released is equal to the difference in energy of the parent nucleus
and that of the two fragments
Q=M(Z,A)− 2 M
(
Z
2
,
A
2
)
=
(
asA^2 /^3 +ac
Z^2
A^1 /^3
)
− 2
[
as
(
A
2
) 2 / 3
+ac
(Z/2)^2
(A/2)^1 /^3
]
=asA^2 /^3 (1− 21 /^3 )+ac
Z^2
A^1 /^3
(
1 −
1
22 /^3
)
InsertingA= 238 ,Z= 92 ,ac= 0 .59 andas=14 we findQ∼=160 MeV.
8.78 The diffusion equation for the steady state in the absence of sources at the
point of interest is
∇^2 φ−K^2 φ=0(1)
whereK^2 = 3 Σa/λtr