Top Banner
Lecture 10 Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light Production of Positron Emitters Image of the Week
29

Lecture 10 Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light Production of Positron Emitters Image of the Week.

Dec 13, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Lecture 10

Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency,

Energy, and Velocity of LightProduction of Positron

EmittersImage of the Week

Page 2: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Proportions

• Direct Proportion: Y = k * X

• If k = 1, Y = X

• Inverse Proportion: Y = k/X

• If k = 1, Y = 1/X

• * means multiplication

Page 3: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

• Inverse Proportion: Y = k/X

• If k = 1, Y = 1/X

• The statement frequency = 1/wavelength, is meaningless without the proportionality constant k

Page 4: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Velocity of Light

• All EM radiation travels at the velocity of light 3.0 x 10**10 cm/sec

• Therefore, when we want frequency, if wavelength is known, we know how far the photon travels for one wavelength

• Likewise, if we want wavelength, and frequency is known, we know how many cycles occur in a given distance.

Page 5: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

• The constant that enables us to determine frequency and wavelength, is the velocity of light.

• Therefore: k = c = 3.0 x 10**10 cm/sec

Page 6: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.
Page 7: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Determination of Energy

It would simplify matters if the energy per cycle was a constant.

Fortuntly, it is.Planck’s constant determines the energy required to complete one

cycle (wavelength)

Page 8: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Planck’s constant: h

h = 6.626 x 10-34 J . sec

= 6.626 x 10-27 erg . sec

= 4.136 x 10-15 eV.sec

Page 9: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Calculations

• Given the frequency, or wavelength, of a photon, the Energy can be calculated.

• Likewise, given the energy, the frequency and wavelength can be calculated.

Page 10: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Example #1

• Find the energy of a photon with a wavelength of: 2.43 x 10-10 cm

• First 4.136 x 3.0 = 12.408

• We have E = (h x c)/ lambda = 12.408 x ?/ lambda

• = 12.408 eV x sec x cm/sec = 12.408eV x cm

Page 11: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

• Then, remember the ? (exponents): (-15 x 10) = -5

• So, we have 12.408 x 10-5 / 2.43 x 10-10

• 12.408/2.43 = 5.106 x 10-5 – (-10) = 5.106 x 105

• = 511 keV

Page 12: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Example #2

• Find the frequency of a photon with a energy of 511KeV:

• We know that E = (h x c)/ lambda

• but frequency = c/lambda.

• Make the substitution: 5.11 x 105eV = h x f

• Rearranging terms: 5.11 x 105eV / 4.136 x 10-15 = 1.2 x 1020 cycles/sec

Page 13: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Radionuclide Production

Methods by which radionuclides are produced. Radionuclides can be produced in a nuclear reactor, in a cyclotron or in a radionuclide generator.

Page 14: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Some Terms

• Flux: # of neutrons, photons, etc, passing through one cm2/instant of time

• Fluence: # of neutrons, photons, etc, that passed through one cm2 over a period of time.

• Cross Section: a probability of interaction, and thus transmutation after target bombardment.

Page 15: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Cyclotron

Page 16: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Particle Accelerators (Cyclotrons)

Particle AcceleratorDid you know that you have a type of particle accelerator in your house right now? In fact, you are reading this slide with one! The cathode ray tube (CRT) of any TV or computer monitor is really a particle accelerator.

Page 17: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

CRT Diagram

Page 18: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

CRT Example

The CRT takes particles (electrons) from the cathode, speeds them up and changes their direction using electromagnets in a vacuum and then smashes them into phosphor molecules on the screen. The collision results in a lighted spot, or pixel, on your TV or computer monitor.

Page 19: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

A cyclotron consists of a pair of hollow, semicircular metal electrodes (called "dees" because of their shape), positioned between the poles of a large electromagnet (not shown). The dees are

separated from one another by a narrow gap. Near the center of the dees is an ion source (typically an electrical arc device in a gas) that is used to generate charged particles.

Page 20: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Cyclotron

Page 21: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Principle of Operation

Period, T, of revolution is constantVelocity increases with each revolution.Radius of revolution increases with each

new period.This enables the application of alternating

electric fields, thus accelerating the particles.

Page 22: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Cyclotron

• Let's say that we have an alpha particle inside our cyclotron. Alpha particles have a charge of +2, so their paths can bent by magnetic fields. As an alpha particle goes around the cyclotron, it crosses the gap between the two D-shaped cavities. If the charge on the cavity in front of the alpha particle is negative and the charge on the cavity in back of it is positive, the alpha particle is pulled forward (remember that opposite charges attract while like charges repel). This just accelerated the alpha particle!

Page 23: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Cyclotron

• The particle travels through one cavity and again comes to the gap. With luck, the radio wave generator has changed the charges on the cavities in time, so the alpha particle once again sees a negative charge in front of it and a positive charge in back of it and is again pulled forward. As long as the timing is right, the alpha particle will always see a negative charge in front of it and a positive charge in back of it when it crosses the gap between cavities. This is how a cyclotron accelerates particles

Page 24: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Cyclotron

• Unfortunately, there's one more thing to worry about. The faster a charged particle moves, the less it is affected by a magnetic field. So, as particles speed up in a cyclotron, they spiral outwards. This makes it easy to get the particles out of the cyclotron, but also puts a limit on the amount of acceleration they can undergo.

Page 25: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Cyclotron Produced Radionuclides

• Cyclotron produced radionuclides include all PET nuclides in common use such as fluorine F -18, oxygen O -15, nitrogen N -13 and carbon C -11, which are activated by proton irradiation.

Page 26: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

Reaction Equations

• X (n, p) Y

• Means neutron, proton reaction

• X, the parent nucleus is bombarded with a neutron.

• The product nucleus decays with the emission of a proton.

Page 27: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

C-11 raclopride. D2 dopamine receptor antagonist. These images were acquired 30-50 min into a continuous infusion of raclopride acquired on the

GE Advance scanner. High uptake is seen in the basal ganglia

Page 28: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

 F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG). Regional brain glucose metabolism. These images were acquired 45-55 min following the bolus injection of FDG acquired on the GE

Advance scanner. High uptake is seen in the gray matter regions.

 

Page 29: Lecture 10  Relationship Between Wavelength, Frequency, Energy, and Velocity of Light  Production of Positron Emitters  Image of the Week.

O-15 water. Regional cerebral blood flow. These images were acquired over a 60 sec period following the arrival of a bolus injection of 10 mCi of [O-

15]water acquired on the GE Advance scanner. High uptake is seen in the gray matter regions.