irradiation phenomenon - definição. O que é irradiation phenomenon. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é irradiation phenomenon - definição

PROCESS IN WHICH NEUTRON RADIATION INDUCES RADIOACTIVITY IN MATERIALS
Neutron irradiation

Irradiated         
EXPOSURE TO IONIZING RADIATION
Irradiate; Irradiated; Irradiating; X-irradiation; Irradiator; Irradiated meat; Meat irradiation; Applied irradiation
·Impf & ·p.p. of Irradiate.
Irradiation         
EXPOSURE TO IONIZING RADIATION
Irradiate; Irradiated; Irradiating; X-irradiation; Irradiator; Irradiated meat; Meat irradiation; Applied irradiation
·noun Fig.: Mental light or illumination.
II. Irradiation ·noun Illumination; irradiance; brilliancy.
III. Irradiation ·noun Act of irradiating, or state of being irradiated.
IV. Irradiation ·noun The apparent enlargement of a bright object seen upon a dark ground, due to the fact that the portions of the retina around the image are stimulated by the intense light; as when a dark spot on a white ground appears smaller, or a white spot on a dark ground larger, than it really is, ·esp. when a little out of focus.
irradiate         
EXPOSURE TO IONIZING RADIATION
Irradiate; Irradiated; Irradiating; X-irradiation; Irradiator; Irradiated meat; Meat irradiation; Applied irradiation
(irradiates, irradiating, irradiated)
If someone or something is irradiated, they are exposed to a large amount of radioactivity. (TECHNICAL)
...the Chernobyl disaster, which irradiated large parts of Europe.
VERB: V n
irradiation
...the harmful effects of irradiation and pollution.
N-UNCOUNT

Wikipédia

Neutron activation

Neutron activation is the process in which neutron radiation induces radioactivity in materials, and occurs when atomic nuclei capture free neutrons, becoming heavier and entering excited states. The excited nucleus decays immediately by emitting gamma rays, or particles such as beta particles, alpha particles, fission products, and neutrons (in nuclear fission). Thus, the process of neutron capture, even after any intermediate decay, often results in the formation of an unstable activation product. Such radioactive nuclei can exhibit half-lives ranging from small fractions of a second to many years.

Neutron activation is the only common way that a stable material can be induced into becoming intrinsically radioactive. All naturally occurring materials, including air, water, and soil, can be induced (activated) by neutron capture into some amount of radioactivity in varying degrees, as a result of the production of neutron-rich radioisotopes. Some atoms require more than one neutron to become unstable, which makes them harder to activate because the probability of a double or triple capture by a nucleus is below that of single capture. Water, for example, is made up of hydrogen and oxygen. Hydrogen requires a double capture to attain instability as tritium (hydrogen-3), while natural oxygen (oxygen-16) requires three captures to become unstable oxygen-19. Thus water is relatively difficult to activate, as compared to sodium chloride (NaCl), in which both the sodium and chlorine atoms become unstable with a single capture each. These facts were experienced first-hand at the Operation Crossroads atomic test series in 1946.