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प्रश्न
Which one of the following cannot emit radiation and why? Excited nucleus, excited electron.
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उत्तर
The energy of the internal motion of a nucleus is quantized. A typical nucleus has a set of allowed energy levels, including a ground state (state of lowest energy) and several excited states. Because of the great strength of nuclear interactions, excitation energies of nuclei are typical of the order of 1 MeV, compared with a few eV for atomic energy levels. In ordinary physical and chemical transformations, the nucleus always remains in its ground state. When a nucleus is placed in an excited state, either by bombardment with high-energy particles or by a radioactive transformation, it can decay to the ground state by emission of one or more photons called gamma rays or gamma-ray photons, with typical energies of 10 keV to 5 MeV. This process is called gamma (γ) decay.
Excited electrons cannot emit radiation because the energy of electronic energy levels is in the range of eV and not MeV ( mega electron volt), y-radiations have energy of the order of MeV.
