Physics 224 Fall 2000
Discoveries and Inventions of Modern Physics due 11:00 am Tuesday Nov. 21
Nov. 16 Colloquium:
``Reactions at Air-Water Interfaces in the Atmosphere: The New
Frontier in Atmospheric Chemistry''
Prof. B. Finlayson-Pitts, UC Irvine
3:30 pm, 101 Rowland Hall
(1)
Use this formula (as Gell-Mann did) to predict the mass of the
.
(use the average of the first two spacings to estimate
the third.) How close is your prediction to the observed value?
(See attached table of masses.)
,
to estimate the minimum momentum of an electron confined to a nucleus
(radius 10-13 cm). From the relativistic energy-momentum
relation,
E2-p2c2=m2c4, determine the corresponding energy,
and compare it with that of an electron emitted in, say, the beta
decay of tritium (a hydrogen atom with one proton and 2 neutrons)
(see attached figure). (This result convinced some people that the
beta-decay electron could not have been rattling around inside
the nucleus, but must be produced in the disintegraion itself.)
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Clare Yu
2000-11-10