- #1
InkTide
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- TL;DR Summary
- Positron emission converts a proton to a neutron - what happens to the now excess electron in a previously neutral atom?
Specifically, this would be beta plus decay and not electron capture, and assumes an electrically neutral radionuclide. Since beta plus decay is the emission of a positron from the nucleus as a proton transmutes into a neutron, the resulting atom now has 1 less elementary charge than before, but no electrons have been consumed, yielding an electron without an orbital to occupy in addition to the daughter isotope, positron, and electron neutrino.
What happens to this excess electron? Is it just left floating around, or does it stick around long enough to convert the daughter isotope briefly to an isolated -1 anion? Does it interact with the electron cloud of the neutral daughter isotope to inherit or contribute to the recoil energy of the daughter atom? What are the odds that it gets annihilated by the outgoing positron, and if that's even possible, what would that look like to an observer?
What happens to this excess electron? Is it just left floating around, or does it stick around long enough to convert the daughter isotope briefly to an isolated -1 anion? Does it interact with the electron cloud of the neutral daughter isotope to inherit or contribute to the recoil energy of the daughter atom? What are the odds that it gets annihilated by the outgoing positron, and if that's even possible, what would that look like to an observer?