Gamow’s Calculation of Alpha Decay – WKB Method
Alpha Decay Explained via Gamow and the WKB Method
Alpha decay, the emission of a helium nucleus (\( \alpha \)-particle) from a heavy nucleus, was initially mysterious because classically the alpha particle’s energy is insufficient to overcome the Coulomb barrier. Gamow (1928) used quantum mechanics and the concept of tunneling to explain how alpha particles escape.
1. Nuclear Potential and Physical Setup
Consider an alpha particle inside a nucleus of charge \( Z \) and mass number \( A \), leaving a daughter nucleus with charge \( Z_d = Z-2 \). The radial potential is:
- Inside the nucleus: attractive nuclear potential \( V(r) \approx -V_0 \).
- Outside the nucleus: Coulomb potential \( V(r) = \dfrac{Z_d Z_\alpha e^2}{4\pi \varepsilon_0 r} \), where \( Z_\alpha = 2 \).
The alpha particle energy \( E \) is much less than the barrier, so classical escape is impossible.
2. Schrödinger Equation and WKB Approximation
For radial motion (\( l = 0 \)), the Schrödinger equation is:
-\frac{\hbar^2}{2m} \frac{d^2 u}{dr^2} + V(r) u = E u, \quad u(r) = r \psi(r)
\]
\[
k(r) = \frac{\sqrt{2m |E-V(r)|}}{\hbar}, \quad
\text{allowed: } E>V \Rightarrow k = \frac{\sqrt{2m(E-V)}}{\hbar}, \quad
\text{forbidden: } E \]
\[
\text{Turning points: } r_1 \approx R, \quad r_2 = \frac{Z_d Z_\alpha e^2}{4\pi \varepsilon_0 E}
\]
WKB gives the tunneling probability:
T \approx \exp\left[-2 \int_{r_1}^{r_2} \kappa(r) \, dr \right] = \exp[-2G], \quad
G \approx \pi \eta – k R
\]
\[
\eta = \frac{Z_d Z_\alpha e^2}{\hbar v}, \quad
k = \frac{\sqrt{2 m E}}{\hbar}, \quad
R = r_0 A^{1/3}, \quad r_0 = 1.2 \text{ fm}
\]
\[
v = \sqrt{\frac{2 E}{m_\alpha}}, \quad
\lambda = P_\alpha \nu T, \quad
\nu \approx \frac{v}{2 R}, \quad
T_{1/2} = \frac{\ln 2}{\lambda}
\]
3. Geiger–Nuttall Law
The WKB result yields the empirical relation:
\[
\log_{10} T_{1/2} \approx a \frac{Z_d}{\sqrt{E_\alpha}} + b
\]
It shows the strong exponential sensitivity of half-life to alpha particle energy.
4. Numeric Examples
Constants used:
- \( \hbar c = 197.327~\mathrm{MeV \cdot fm} \)
- \( e^2/(4\pi \varepsilon_0) = 1.440~\mathrm{MeV \cdot fm} \)
- \( m_\alpha c^2 = 3727.379~\mathrm{MeV} \)
- Assumed \( r_0 = 1.2~\mathrm{fm} \)
| Isotope | Z | A | Eα (MeV) | Zd | R (fm) | v/c | η | k (fm⁻¹) | G | T = e^{-2G} | ν (Hz) | λ (Pα=1) (s⁻¹) | T₁/₂ (Pα=1) (s) | Pα required to match experiment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ^{238}U | 92 | 238 | 4.267 | 90 | 7.437 | 0.04785 | 27.451 | 0.9038 | 79.519 | 8.518×10⁻⁷⁰ | 9.645×10²⁰ | 8.215×10⁻⁴⁹ | 8.437×10⁴⁷ | ≈ 5.98×10³⁰ |
| ^{212}Po | 84 | 212 | 8.954 | 82 | 7.155 | 0.06931 | 17.266 | 1.3093 | 44.874 | 1.055×10⁻³⁹ | 1.452×10²¹ | 1.531×10⁻¹⁸ | 4.526×10¹⁷ | ≈ 1.51×10²⁴ |
Notes and Interpretation
- The simple WKB/Gamow model with
P_α = 1greatly overestimates half-lives compared with experiment. - Experimental half-lives:
- ^{238}U: 4.468×10⁹ yr ≈ 1.41×10¹⁷ s
- ^{212}Po: 2.99×10⁻⁷ s
- The preformation probability \(P_α\) required to match experiments is extremely large in this naive calculation.
- Gamow’s major contribution was explaining the functional form of the Geiger–Nuttall law: \( \log_{10} T_{1/2} \propto Z_d / \sqrt{E_\alpha} \).