Effects of Radiation on Matter: Difference between revisions

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Contents [hide]  
Contents [hide]  
1 The Main Idea
1 The Main Idea[[Link title]]
1.1 A Mathematical Model
1.1 A Mathematical Model
1.2 A Computational Model
1.2 A Computational Model
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5.2 External links
5.2 External links
6 References
6 References
The Main Idea[edit]
The Main Idea[[[edit]]]


A Mathematical Model[edit]
A Mathematical Model[edit]

Revision as of 23:12, 1 December 2015

Effects of Radiation On Matter

Radiation refers to electromagnetic radiation, which can be either ionizing or non-ionizing. Ionizing radiations, such as gamma rays, interact with neutral atoms to create charged ions. In this case, we will be dealing with non-ionizing radiations. It is known that most of the atom is hollow, so most of the radiations should pass through undisturbed. The part that will be focused on is when the radiations interact with the solid particles of the atom, namely, the electron and nucleus.

Contents [hide] 1 The Main IdeaLink title 1.1 A Mathematical Model 1.2 A Computational Model 2 Examples 2.1 Simple 2.2 Middling 2.3 Difficult 3 Connectedness 4 History 5 See also 5.1 Further reading 5.2 External links 6 References The Main Idea[[[edit]]]

A Mathematical Model[edit]

A Computational Model[edit]

Examples[edit]


Simple[edit] Middling[edit] Difficult[edit] Connectedness[edit]

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History[edit]


See also[edit]


Further reading[edit]


External links[edit]

References[edit]

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