Beta Emission: Positive and Negative
Beta decay is a type of radioactive decay in which a nucleus emits a beta particle, transforming into a different element while conserving mass number but changing atomic number. There are two main types: beta-minus (β⁻) emission and beta-plus (β⁺) emission.
These processes help unstable nuclei achieve greater stability by adjusting the neutron-to-proton ratio.
Beta-Minus (β⁻) Emission
In beta-minus decay, a neutron in the nucleus is converted into a proton, emitting an electron (β⁻ particle) and an electron antineutrino (ν̄ₑ).
The nuclear reaction for a parent nucleus AZX is:
This occurs in neutron-rich nuclei (below the stability curve). Example: Carbon-14 decay.
Beta-Plus (β⁺) Emission
In beta-plus decay, a proton is converted into a neutron, emitting a positron (β⁺ particle) and an electron neutrino (νₑ).
The nuclear reaction is:
This occurs in proton-rich nuclei (above the stability curve). Example: Fluorine-18 used in PET scans.
Key Features of Beta Decay
Beta decay adjusts the neutron-proton ratio toward the valley of stability on the nuclear chart.
Read also Electron Capture
In beta-minus decay, what particle is emitted along with the electron?
A. NeutrinoB. Antineutrino
C. Proton
D. Positron
Why does the beta particle energy spectrum appear continuous?
A. Due to recoil of the nucleusB. Energy sharing with the (anti)neutrino
C. Multiple decay paths
D. Detector resolution