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Beta particle
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===Beta decay schemes=== [[File:Cs-137-decay.svg|thumb|Caesium-137 decay scheme, showing it initially undergoes beta decay. The 661 keV gamma peak associated with <sup>137</sup>Cs is actually emitted by the daughter radionuclide.]] The accompanying decay scheme diagram shows the beta decay of [[caesium-137]]. <sup>137</sup>Cs is noted for a characteristic gamma peak at 661 keV, but this is actually emitted by the daughter radionuclide <sup>137m</sup>Ba. The diagram shows the type and energy of the emitted radiation, its relative abundance, and the daughter nuclides after decay. [[Phosphorus-32]] is a beta emitter widely used in medicine. It has a short half-life of 14.29 days<ref name="LNHB">{{cite web |title=Phosphorus-32 |url=http://www.nucleide.org/DDEP_WG/Nuclides/P-32_tables.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://www.nucleide.org/DDEP_WG/Nuclides/P-32_tables.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |access-date=28 June 2022 |website=nucleide.org |publisher=Laboratoire Nationale Henri Bequerel}}</ref> and decays into sulfur-32 by [[beta decay]] as shown in this nuclear equation: :{| border="0" |- style="height:2em;" |{{nuclide|Phosphorus|32}} ||β ||{{nuclide|Sulfur|32|charge=1+}} ||+ ||{{SubatomicParticle|link=yes|Electron}} ||+ ||{{SubatomicParticle|link=yes|Electron Antineutrino}} |} 1.709 [[MeV]] of energy is released during the decay.<ref name="LNHB"/> The kinetic energy of the [[electron]] varies with an average of approximately 0.5 MeV and the remainder of the energy is carried by the nearly undetectable [[electron antineutrino]]. In comparison to other beta radiation-emitting nuclides, the electron is moderately energetic. It is blocked by around 1 m of air or 5 mm of [[acrylic glass]].
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