The website has the complete lesson note for all the subjects in secondary school but this piece showcases the JSS3 Basic Science Lesson Note on Radioactivity. You can use the website search button to filter out the subject of interest to you.

CLICK HERE to download the complete Document: DOWNLOAD HERE

TOPIC:   RADIOACTIVITY

CONTENT:

  1. Brief History of Radioactivity
  2. Properties and Characteristics of Radiation
  3. Uses of Radioactivity

 Brief History of Radioactivity

MEANING OF RADIOACTIVITY: This means the natural dissipation of radioactive element by half after every specific number of years or period of time say 20 years etc.  The nuclei of certain elements are not stable, hence they disintegrate and simultaneously emit certain kinds of radiation, and in the process, change into nuclei of other elements. This phenomenon is known as radioactivity.

Definition of Radioactivity: Radioactivity is the spontaneous disintegration of atomic nuclei by the emission of subatomic particles called alpha particles and beta particles, or of electromagnetic rays called x-rays and gamma rays.

BRIEF HISTORY OF RADIOACTIVITY

The phenomenon of radioactivity was discovered in 1896 by the French Physicist by name Antoine Henri Becquerel when he observed that the element of Uranium can blacken a photographic plate, although separated from it by glass or black paper. Some few years later, Marie and Pierre Curie husband and wife showed that thorium, polonium, and radium also produce these rays.

SOME RADIOACTIVE ELEMENTS

  1. Uranium
  2. Thorium
  3. Polonium
  4. Radium
  5. Potassium
  6. Rubidium
  7. Francium
  8. Plutonium
  9. Astatine
  10. Protactinium

TYPES OF RADIATION

They are basically three (3) different kinds of radiation namely:

Alpha particles    α

Beta particles       β

Gamma rays   γ

These are the invisible ray produced by the radioactive elements; that is what we refer to as radiation.

Note that X-RAY is not part of the basic three (3) rays above.

Click on the Downloadable Button to get the FULL NOTE

Copyright warnings! Do not copy.