Energy from Uranium

Page 50

Atomic Mass Model & Background In this activity, pennies will be used to model protons and neutrons in an atom. A heads-up penny will represent a proton, and a tails-up penny will represent a neutron. All protons are identical to each other, and all neutrons are identical to other neutrons. Pennies minted after 1982 are all made the same way from the same materials, like protons and neutrons have almost exactly the same mass from one to the other. Neutrons are very slightly heavier than protons, but this difference is difficult to notice without the most advanced instruments. For all practical purposes, one proton and one neutron have the same mass.

 Materials 60 Pennies Digital balance

Procedure 1. Find carbon on the Periodic Table of the Elements. 2. Carbon’s atomic number is _____________. The atomic number is the number of protons in an element, and identifies the element. The number of protons determines the element as listed on the Periodic Table of the Elements. 3. How many protons does every carbon atom have? _____________ 4. The mass listed for carbon is ___________ amu. When rounded to the nearest whole number, carbon’s mass number is ____________. 5. The mass of an atom is the sum of the number of protons and number of neutrons. If every carbon atom has ________ protons, and the mass of carbon on the periodic table is _________, the number of neutrons in most carbon atoms is _________. 6. Using pennies to represent protons (heads) and neutrons (tails), create a carbon nucleus. With all the protons and neutrons for the carbon atom lying flat on the table, move them together in a tight circle. Draw a diagram of the carbon nucleus in the box. Label the protons and neutrons with P’s and N’s instead of heads and tails.

Carbon Atom Nucleus

7. How many total protons and neutrons are in the carbon nucleus you made? __________ This isotope of carbon is called carbon-12 because it has 12 total protons and neutrons. 8. Which other question above was answered with “12”? ________ This is not a coincidence! Atomic mass on the periodic table is given in units of atomic mass units. One atomic mass unit (amu) is defined as one-twelfth the mass of a carbon-12 atom. 9. Using the digital balance, measure the mass in grams of all the pennies (protons and neutrons) making up your carbon-12 nucleus. _____________ g 10. Divide the total mass by 12 to get one-twelfth the mass of your carbon-12 nucleus. __________ g 11. Using the digital balance, measure the mass of one of the pennies from your nucleus. __________ g

 Conclusion How does the measurement in #11 compare to the calculation you did in #10 above? What does the mass tell you about an atom?

50

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Energy From Uranium

www.NEED.org


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Glossary

7min
pages 75-77

Nuclear Energy Bingo

1min
page 74

Culminating Activity: Nuclear Energy Letter Prompt

1min
page 70

Nuclear Energy Assessment

1min
pages 71-73

Culminating Activity: Nuclear Power Plant Hearing

5min
pages 68-69

Uranium in the Round Cards

2min
pages 65-67

Nuclear Energy Expo

4min
pages 63-64

Milling Simulation

1min
page 59

Radiation Dose Chart

2min
page 58

M&Mium Radioactive Decay

1min
page 56

Licorice Decay

1min
page 55

Atomic Mass Model

2min
page 50

Science of Electricity Model

9min
pages 46-48

Nuclear Energy Assessment Answer Key

2min
page 23

Internet Resources

2min
page 22

Careers in the Nuclear Industry

3min
page 42

Nuclear Energy Bingo Instructions

5min
pages 20-21

Standards Correlation Information

1min
page 4

Teacher Guide

31min
pages 6-19

Materials

1min
page 5
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