Friday, 28 June 2013

The unit of length convenient on the nuclear scale is a fermi : 1 f = 10– 15 m. Nuclear sizes obey roughly the following empirical relation : where r is the radius of the nucleus, A its mass number, and r0 is a constant equal to about, 1.2 f. Show that the rule implies that nuclear mass density is nearly constant for different nuclei. Estimate the mass density of sodium nucleus. Compare it with the average mass density of a sodium atom obtained in Exercise. 2.27.

The unit of length convenient on the nuclear scale is a fermi : 1 f = 10– 15 m. Nuclear sizes obey roughly the following empirical relation : where r is the radius of the nucleus, A its mass number, and r0 is a constant equal to about, 1.2 f. Show that the rule implies that nuclear mass density is nearly constant for
different nuclei. Estimate the mass density of sodium nucleus. Compare it with the average mass density of a sodium atom obtained in Exercise. 2.27.
Answer:
Radius of nucleus r is given by the relation,

Now, the mass of a nuclei M is equal to its mass number i.e.,
M = A amu = A × 1.66 × 10–27 kg
Density of nucleus,
ρ =

This relation shows that nuclear mass depends only on constant . Hence, the nuclear
mass densities of all nuclei are nearly the same.
Density of sodium nucleus is given by,

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