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First exams 2025

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The Random Nature of Radioactive Decay (CIE A Level Physics)

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The random nature of radioactive decay

  • Radioactive decay is defined as:

The spontaneous disintegration of a nucleus to form a more stable nucleus, resulting in the emission of an alpha, beta or gamma particle

  • The random nature of radioactive decay can be demonstrated by observing the count rate of a Geiger-Muller (GM) tube
    • When a GM tube is placed near a radioactive source, the counts are found to be irregular and cannot be predicted
    • Each count represents a decay of an unstable nucleus
    • These fluctuations in count rate on the GM tube provide evidence for the randomness of radioactive decay

Graph of radioactive decay

Radioactivity Fluctuations, downloadable AS & A Level Physics revision notes

The variation of count rate over time of a sample radioactive gas. The fluctuations show the randomness of radioactive decay

Characteristics of radioactive decay

  • Radioactive decay is both spontaneous and random
  • A spontaneous process is defined as:

A process which cannot be influenced by environmental factors

  • This means radioactive decay cannot be affected by environmental factors such as:
    • temperature
    • pressure
    • chemical conditions
  • A random process is defined as:

A process in which the exact time of decay of a nucleus cannot be predicted

  • Instead, the nucleus has a constant probability, ie. the same chance, of decaying in a given time
  • Therefore, with large numbers of nuclei, it is possible to statistically predict the behaviour of the entire group

Examiner Tip

Make sure you can define what constitutes a radioactive decay, a random process and a spontaneous decay - these are all very common exam questions!

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Leander

Author: Leander

Expertise: Physics

Leander graduated with First-class honours in Science and Education from Sheffield Hallam University. She won the prestigious Lord Robert Winston Solomon Lipson Prize in recognition of her dedication to science and teaching excellence. After teaching and tutoring both science and maths students, Leander now brings this passion for helping young people reach their potential to her work at SME.