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Beta decay transition

In nuclear physics, a beta decay transition is the change in state of an atomic nucleus undergoing beta decay. (β-decay) When undergoing beta decay, a nucleus emits a beta particle and a corresponding neutrino, transforming the original nuclide into one with the same mass, but differing charge. (an isobar)

There are several types of beta decay transition. In a Fermi transition, the spins of the two emitted particles are anti-parallel, for a combined spin . As a result, the total angular momentum of the nucleus is unchanged by the transition. By contrast, in a Gamow-Teller transition, the spins of the two emitted particles are parallel, with total spin , leading to a change in angular momentum between the initial and final states of the nucleus.[1]

The theoretical work in describing these transitions was done between 1934 and 1936 by George Gamow and Edward Teller at George Washington University.

The weak interaction and beta decay edit

  
Fermi's interaction showing the 4-point fermion vector current, coupled under Fermi's coupling constant, "Gf". Fermi's theory was the first theoretical effort in describing nuclear decay rates for beta decay. The Gamow–Teller theory was a necessary extension of Fermi's theory.

β decay had been first described theoretically by Fermi's original ansatz which was Lorentz-invariant and involved a 4-point fermion vector current. However, this did not incorporate parity violation within the matrix element in Fermi's Golden Rule seen in weak interactions. The Gamow–Teller theory was necessary for the inclusion of parity violation by modifying the matrix element to include vector and axial-vector couplings of fermions. This formed the matrix element that completed the Fermi theory of β decay and described parity violation, neutrino helicity, muon decay properties along with the concept of lepton universality. Before the Standard Model of Particle Physics was developed, George Sudarshan and Robert Marshak, and also independently Richard Feynman and Murray Gell-Mann, determined the correct tensor structure (vector minus axial vector, VA) of the four-fermion interaction. From there modern electroweak theory was developed, which described the weak interaction in terms of massive gauge bosons which was required for describing high energy particle cross-sections.

Fermi transition edit

In the Fermi transition, the electron and neutrino emitted from the β-decay parent nucleus have spin vectors which are anti-parallel to one another.

This means

  no change in the total angular momentum of the nucleus
Examples
 
 

also   parity is conserved:  .

  = excited state of N

Gamow–Teller transition edit

In nuclear transitions governed by strong and electromagnetic interactions (which are invariant under parity), the physical laws would be the same if the interaction was reflected in a mirror. Hence the sum of a vector and a pseudovector is not meaningful. However, the weak force, which governs beta decay and the corresponding nuclear transitions, does depend on the chirality of the interaction, and in this case pseudovectors and vectors are added.

The Gamow–Teller transition is a pseudovector transition, that is, the selection rules for beta decay caused by such a transition involve no parity change of the nuclear state.[2] The spin of the parent nucleus can either remain unchanged or change by ±1. However, unlike the Fermi transition, transitions from spin 0 to spin 0 are excluded.

In terms of total nuclear angular momentum, the Gamow–Teller transition ( ) is

 
Examples
 
  also   parity is conserved:   the final 6Li 1+ state has   and the   state has   states that couple to an even parity state.

Mixed Fermi and Gamow–Teller decay edit

Due to the existence of the 2 possible final states, each β decay is a mixture of the two decay types. This essentially means that some of the time the remaining nucleus is in an excited state and other times the decay is directly to the ground state. Unlike Fermi transitions, Gamow–Teller transitions occur via an operator that operates only if the initial nuclear wavefunction and final nuclear wavefunction are defined. The Isospin and Angular Momentum selection rules can be deduced from the operator and the identification of allowed and forbidden decays can be found. [3]

Examples
 
 

or

 
 

The above reaction involves "mirror nuclei", nuclei in which the numbers of protons and neutrons are interchanged.

One can measure the angular distributions of β particles with respect to the axis of nuclear spin polarization to determine what the mixture is between the two decay types (Fermi and Gamow–Teller).

The mixture can be expressed as a ratio of matrix elements (Fermi's golden rule relates transitions to matrix elements)

 [4]

The interesting observation is that y for mirror nuclei is on the order of the value of y for neutron decay while non-mirror nuclear decays tend to be an order of magnitude less.

Physical consequences edit

Conservation of weak vector current edit

The Conservation of Vector Current hypothesis was created out of the Gamow–Teller theory. The Fermi decay is the result of a vector current and is dominant in the decay of the neutron to a proton while the Gamow–Teller decay is an axial-current transition. Conservation of Vector Current is the assumption that the weak vector current responsible for the decay is conserved. Another observation is that the Fermi transitions illustrate how the nucleons inside the nucleus interact as free particles despite being surrounded by mesons mediating the nuclear force. This is useful in considering the barrier tunnelling mechanism involved with alpha decay and in deriving the Geiger–Nuttall law.

Forbidden decays edit

The Fermi decays ( ) are often referred to as the "superallowed" decays while Gamow–Teller ( ) decays are simple "allowed" decays.

Forbidden decays are those which are substantially more improbable, due to parity violation, and as a result have long decay times.

Now the angular momentum (L) of the   systems can be non-zero (in the center-of-mass frame of the system).

Below are the Observed Selection Rules for Nuclear Beta-Decay:[5]

Transition L ΔI Δπ
Fermi 0 0 0
Gamow–Teller 0 0, 1 0
first-forbidden (parity change) 1 0, 1, 2 1
second-forbidden (no parity change) 2 1, 2, 3 0
third-forbidden (parity change) 3 2, 3, 4 1
fourth-forbidden (no parity change) 4 3, 4, 5 0

Each of the above have Fermi ( ) and Gamow–Teller ( ) decays.

So for the "first-forbidden" transitions you have

  Fermi

and

  Gamow–Teller

systems.

Notice that   (parity violating transition).

The half life of the decay increases with each order:[6]

 

Decay rate edit

A calculation of the β emission decay rate is quite different from a calculation of α decay. In α decay the nucleons of the original nucleus are used to form the final state α particle (4He). In β decay the β and neutrino particles are the result of a nucleon transformation into its isospin complement (n → p or p → n). Below is a list of the differences:

  1. The β electron and neutrino did not exist before the decay.
  2. The β electron and neutrino are relativistic (nuclear decay energy is usually not enough to make heavy α nucleus relativistic).
  3. The light decay products can have continuous energy distributions. (before assuming the α carried away most of the energy was usually a good approximation).

The β decay rate calculation was developed by Fermi in 1934 and was based on Pauli's neutrino hypothesis.

Fermi's Golden Rule says that the transition rate   is given by a transition matrix element (or "amplitude")   weighted by the phase space and Planck's constant   such that

 

From this analysis we can conclude that the Gamow–Teller nuclear transition from 0 → ±1 is a weak perturbation of the system's interaction Hamiltonian. This assumption appears to be true based on the very short time scale (10−20 s) it takes for the formation of quasi-stationary nuclear states compared with the time it takes for a β decay (half lives ranging from seconds to days).

The matrix element between parent and daughter nuclei in such a transition is:

 

with the interaction Hamiltonian forming 2 separate states from the perturbation. [7]

 

References edit

  1. ^ Clayton, Donald D. (1983). Principles of stellar evolution and nucleosynthesis : with a new preface (University of Chicago Press ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 366-367. ISBN 0-226-10953-4.
  2. ^ Franz Osterfeld (1992). "Nuclear spin and isospin excitations". Reviews of Modern Physics. 64 (2): 491–557. Bibcode:1992RvMP...64..491O. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.64.491.
  3. ^ Samuel S.M. Wong (2004). Introductory Nuclear Physics (2nd ed.). Wiley-VCH. p. 198.
  4. ^ Saw, E. L.; Yap, C. T. (1988-11-03). "The Fermi to Gamow–Teller mixing ratio of the β+ decay of 52Mn and time-reversal invariance". Zeitschrift für Physik A. 332 (3): 285–287. doi:10.1007/BF01295458. S2CID 120281084.
  5. ^ Samuel S.M. Wong (2004). Introductory Nuclear Physics (2nd ed.). Wiley-VCH. p. 200.
  6. ^ Willard F. Libby (1981). Radioactivity & particle physics and, Radioactive fallout & technology. University of California. p. 303.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ Samuel S.M. Wong (2004). Introductory Nuclear Physics (2nd ed.). Wiley-VCH. p. 192.

External links edit

  • Fermi Theory of Beta Decay
  • Transition Probabilities and Fermi's Golden Rule

beta, decay, transition, this, article, needs, attention, from, expert, physics, specific, problem, this, article, still, needs, revision, make, generally, about, transitions, simplify, elaborate, discussion, perhaps, less, technical, experts, reduce, redundan. This article needs attention from an expert in Physics The specific problem is This article still needs revision to make it generally about transitions to simplify and elaborate the discussion to be perhaps less technical to non experts and to reduce the redundancies with the beta decay page WikiProject Physics may be able to help recruit an expert August 2016 This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details August 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message In nuclear physics a beta decay transition is the change in state of an atomic nucleus undergoing beta decay b decay When undergoing beta decay a nucleus emits a beta particle and a corresponding neutrino transforming the original nuclide into one with the same mass but differing charge an isobar There are several types of beta decay transition In a Fermi transition the spins of the two emitted particles are anti parallel for a combined spin S 0 displaystyle S 0 As a result the total angular momentum of the nucleus is unchanged by the transition By contrast in a Gamow Teller transition the spins of the two emitted particles are parallel with total spin S 1 displaystyle S 1 leading to a change in angular momentum between the initial and final states of the nucleus 1 The theoretical work in describing these transitions was done between 1934 and 1936 by George Gamow and Edward Teller at George Washington University Contents 1 The weak interaction and beta decay 2 Fermi transition 3 Gamow Teller transition 4 Mixed Fermi and Gamow Teller decay 5 Physical consequences 5 1 Conservation of weak vector current 5 1 1 Forbidden decays 5 2 Decay rate 6 References 7 External linksThe weak interaction and beta decay edit nbsp Fermi s interaction showing the 4 point fermion vector current coupled under Fermi s coupling constant Gf Fermi s theory was the first theoretical effort in describing nuclear decay rates for beta decay The Gamow Teller theory was a necessary extension of Fermi s theory b decay had been first described theoretically by Fermi s original ansatz which was Lorentz invariant and involved a 4 point fermion vector current However this did not incorporate parity violation within the matrix element in Fermi s Golden Rule seen in weak interactions The Gamow Teller theory was necessary for the inclusion of parity violation by modifying the matrix element to include vector and axial vector couplings of fermions This formed the matrix element that completed the Fermi theory of b decay and described parity violation neutrino helicity muon decay properties along with the concept of lepton universality Before the Standard Model of Particle Physics was developed George Sudarshan and Robert Marshak and also independently Richard Feynman and Murray Gell Mann determined the correct tensor structure vector minus axial vector V A of the four fermion interaction From there modern electroweak theory was developed which described the weak interaction in terms of massive gauge bosons which was required for describing high energy particle cross sections Fermi transition editIn the Fermi transition the electron and neutrino emitted from the b decay parent nucleus have spin vectors which are anti parallel to one another This means DI 0 displaystyle Delta I 0 Rightarrow nbsp no change in the total angular momentum of the nucleusExamples814O6 714N7 b ne displaystyle 8 14 text O 6 rightarrow 7 14 text N 7 beta nu text e nbsp Ii 0 If 0 DI 0 displaystyle I i 0 rightarrow I f 0 Rightarrow Delta I 0 nbsp also Dp 0 displaystyle Delta pi 0 Rightarrow nbsp parity is conserved p Yℓm 1 ℓ displaystyle pi Y ell m 1 ell nbsp 714N7 displaystyle 7 14 text N 7 nbsp excited state of NGamow Teller transition editIn nuclear transitions governed by strong and electromagnetic interactions which are invariant under parity the physical laws would be the same if the interaction was reflected in a mirror Hence the sum of a vector and a pseudovector is not meaningful However the weak force which governs beta decay and the corresponding nuclear transitions does depend on the chirality of the interaction and in this case pseudovectors and vectors are added The Gamow Teller transition is a pseudovector transition that is the selection rules for beta decay caused by such a transition involve no parity change of the nuclear state 2 The spin of the parent nucleus can either remain unchanged or change by 1 However unlike the Fermi transition transitions from spin 0 to spin 0 are excluded In terms of total nuclear angular momentum the Gamow Teller transition Ii If displaystyle I i rightarrow I f nbsp is DI If Ii 0Ii If 01Ii 0 and If 1 displaystyle Delta I I f I i begin cases 0 amp I i I f 0 1 amp I i 0 text and I f 1 end cases nbsp Examples dd 26He4 36Li3 b n e displaystyle 2 6 text He 4 rightarrow 3 6 text Li 3 beta bar nu text e nbsp dd Ii 0 If 1 DI 1 displaystyle I i 0 rightarrow I f 1 Rightarrow Delta I 1 nbsp also Dp 0 displaystyle Delta pi 0 Rightarrow nbsp parity is conserved p Yℓm 1 ℓ displaystyle pi Y ell m 1 ell Rightarrow nbsp the final 6Li 1 state has L 1 displaystyle L 1 nbsp and the b n e displaystyle beta bar nu text e nbsp state has S 1 displaystyle S 1 nbsp states that couple to an even parity state dd Mixed Fermi and Gamow Teller decay editDue to the existence of the 2 possible final states each b decay is a mixture of the two decay types This essentially means that some of the time the remaining nucleus is in an excited state and other times the decay is directly to the ground state Unlike Fermi transitions Gamow Teller transitions occur via an operator that operates only if the initial nuclear wavefunction and final nuclear wavefunction are defined The Isospin and Angular Momentum selection rules can be deduced from the operator and the identification of allowed and forbidden decays can be found 3 Examples1121Na10 1021Ne11 b ne displaystyle 11 21 text Na 10 rightarrow 10 21 text Ne 11 beta nu text e nbsp Ii 32 If 32 DI 0 displaystyle I i frac 3 2 Rightarrow I f frac 3 2 Rightarrow Delta I 0 nbsp or 1121Na10 1021Ne11 b ne displaystyle 11 21 text Na 10 rightarrow 10 21 text Ne 11 beta nu text e nbsp Ii 32 If 52 DI 1 displaystyle I i frac 3 2 Rightarrow I f frac 5 2 Rightarrow Delta I 1 nbsp The above reaction involves mirror nuclei nuclei in which the numbers of protons and neutrons are interchanged One can measure the angular distributions of b particles with respect to the axis of nuclear spin polarization to determine what the mixture is between the two decay types Fermi and Gamow Teller The mixture can be expressed as a ratio of matrix elements Fermi s golden rule relates transitions to matrix elements y gFMFgGTMGT displaystyle y equiv frac g text F M text F g text GT M text GT nbsp 4 The interesting observation is that y for mirror nuclei is on the order of the value of y for neutron decay while non mirror nuclear decays tend to be an order of magnitude less Physical consequences editConservation of weak vector current edit The Conservation of Vector Current hypothesis was created out of the Gamow Teller theory The Fermi decay is the result of a vector current and is dominant in the decay of the neutron to a proton while the Gamow Teller decay is an axial current transition Conservation of Vector Current is the assumption that the weak vector current responsible for the decay is conserved Another observation is that the Fermi transitions illustrate how the nucleons inside the nucleus interact as free particles despite being surrounded by mesons mediating the nuclear force This is useful in considering the barrier tunnelling mechanism involved with alpha decay and in deriving the Geiger Nuttall law Forbidden decays edit The Fermi decays DI 0 displaystyle Delta I 0 nbsp are often referred to as the superallowed decays while Gamow Teller DI 1 displaystyle Delta I 1 nbsp decays are simple allowed decays Forbidden decays are those which are substantially more improbable due to parity violation and as a result have long decay times Now the angular momentum L of the b n displaystyle beta nu nbsp systems can be non zero in the center of mass frame of the system Below are the Observed Selection Rules for Nuclear Beta Decay 5 Transition L DI DpFermi 0 0 0Gamow Teller 0 0 1 0first forbidden parity change 1 0 1 2 1second forbidden no parity change 2 1 2 3 0third forbidden parity change 3 2 3 4 1fourth forbidden no parity change 4 3 4 5 0Each of the above have Fermi S 0 displaystyle S 0 nbsp and Gamow Teller S 1 displaystyle S 1 nbsp decays So for the first forbidden transitions you have I L S 1 0 DI 0 1 displaystyle vec I vec L vec S vec 1 vec 0 Rightarrow Delta I 0 1 nbsp Fermiand I L S 1 1 DI 0 1 2 displaystyle vec I vec L vec S vec 1 vec 1 Rightarrow Delta I 0 1 2 nbsp Gamow Tellersystems Notice that Dp 1 displaystyle Delta pi 1 Rightarrow nbsp parity violating transition The half life of the decay increases with each order 6 1122Na11 3 1022Ne12 2 b net1 2 2 6years49115In66 92 50115Sn65 12 b n et1 2 1014years displaystyle begin aligned 11 22 text Na 11 left 3 right amp rightarrow 10 22 text Ne 12 left 2 right beta nu text e amp t 1 2 amp 2 6 text years 49 115 text In 66 left frac 9 2 right amp rightarrow 50 115 text Sn 65 left frac 1 2 right beta bar nu text e amp t 1 2 amp 10 14 text years end aligned nbsp Decay rate edit A calculation of the b emission decay rate is quite different from a calculation of a decay In a decay the nucleons of the original nucleus are used to form the final state a particle 4He In b decay the b and neutrino particles are the result of a nucleon transformation into its isospin complement n p or p n Below is a list of the differences The b electron and neutrino did not exist before the decay The b electron and neutrino are relativistic nuclear decay energy is usually not enough to make heavy a nucleus relativistic The light decay products can have continuous energy distributions before assuming the a carried away most of the energy was usually a good approximation The b decay rate calculation was developed by Fermi in 1934 and was based on Pauli s neutrino hypothesis Fermi s Golden Rule says that the transition rate W displaystyle W nbsp is given by a transition matrix element or amplitude Mi f displaystyle M i f nbsp weighted by the phase space and Planck s constant ℏ displaystyle hbar nbsp such that W 2pℏ Mi f 2 Phase Space ln 2t1 2 displaystyle W frac 2 pi hbar left M i f right 2 times text Phase Space frac ln 2 t 1 2 nbsp From this analysis we can conclude that the Gamow Teller nuclear transition from 0 1 is a weak perturbation of the system s interaction Hamiltonian This assumption appears to be true based on the very short time scale 10 20 s it takes for the formation of quasi stationary nuclear states compared with the time it takes for a b decay half lives ranging from seconds to days The matrix element between parent and daughter nuclei in such a transition is Mi f 2 psDaughterϕbpsn H int psParent displaystyle left M i f right 2 left langle psi text Daughter phi beta psi nu right hat H text int left psi text Parent right rangle nbsp with the interaction Hamiltonian forming 2 separate states from the perturbation 7 H int GV1 t Fermi decayGAs t Gamow Teller Decay displaystyle hat H text int begin cases G V hat 1 hat tau amp text Fermi decay G A hat sigma hat tau amp text Gamow Teller Decay end cases nbsp References edit Clayton Donald D 1983 Principles of stellar evolution and nucleosynthesis with a new preface University of Chicago Press ed Chicago University of Chicago Press p 366 367 ISBN 0 226 10953 4 Franz Osterfeld 1992 Nuclear spin and isospin excitations Reviews of Modern Physics 64 2 491 557 Bibcode 1992RvMP 64 491O doi 10 1103 RevModPhys 64 491 Samuel S M Wong 2004 Introductory Nuclear Physics 2nd ed Wiley VCH p 198 Saw E L Yap C T 1988 11 03 The Fermi to Gamow Teller mixing ratio of the b decay of 52Mn and time reversal invariance Zeitschrift fur Physik A 332 3 285 287 doi 10 1007 BF01295458 S2CID 120281084 Samuel S M Wong 2004 Introductory Nuclear Physics 2nd ed Wiley VCH p 200 Willard F Libby 1981 Radioactivity amp particle physics and Radioactive fallout amp technology University of California p 303 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Samuel S M Wong 2004 Introductory Nuclear Physics 2nd ed Wiley VCH p 192 External links editFermi Theory of Beta Decay Transition Probabilities and Fermi s Golden Rule Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Beta decay transition amp oldid 1216152518, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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