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Prologue: Numerical Analysis

This document discusses the basic concepts of nuclear physics including the composition of atomic nuclei, the discovery of neutrons, and how nuclei have been studied to understand their properties and structure.

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Prabhat Ray
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
26 views

Prologue: Numerical Analysis

This document discusses the basic concepts of nuclear physics including the composition of atomic nuclei, the discovery of neutrons, and how nuclei have been studied to understand their properties and structure.

Uploaded by

Prabhat Ray
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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numerical analysis

Prologue
More than 100 elements are now known to exist, distinguished from each other by the electric charge Ze on the atomic nucleus. This charge is balanced by the charge carried by the Z electrons which together with the nucleus make up the neutral atom. The elements are also distinguished by their mass, more than 99% of which resides in the nucleus. Are there other distinguishing properties of nuclei? Have the nuclei been in existence since the beginning of time? Are there elements in the Universe which do not exist on Earth? What physical principles underlie the properties of nuclei? Why are their masses so closely correlated with their electric charges? Why are some nuclei radioactive? Radioactivity is used to man's benet in medicine. Nuclear ssion is exploited in power generation. But man's use of nuclear physics has also posed the terrible threat of nuclear weapons. This book aims to set out the basic concepts which have been developed by nuclear physicists in their attempts to understand the nucleus. Besides satisfying our appetite for knowledge, these concepts must be understood if we are to make an informed judgment on the benets and problems of nuclear technology. After the discovery of the neutron by Chadwick in 1932, it was accepted that a nucleus of atomic number Z was made up of Z protons and some number N of neutrons. The proton and neutron were then thought to be elementary particles, although it is now clear that they are not but rather are themselves structured entities. We shall also see that in addition to neutrons and protons several other particles play an important, if indirect, role in the physics of nuclei. In this and the following two chapters, to provide a background to our subsequent study of the
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