Positron Emission (Beta+ Decay) |
Positron emission is a type of beta decay, sometimes referred to as "beta plus". In beta plus decay, a proton is converted to a neutron via the weak nuclear force and a beta plus particle (a positron) and a neutrino are emitted. Isotopes which emit positrons include Carbon-11, Nitrogen-13, Oxygen-15 and Fluorine-18; for example: |
These isotopes are used in positron emission tomography, a technique used for medical imaging. |
Electron capture is a competing decay mode in this process and is energetically favoured, but as the energy difference goes up so does the branching ratio towards positron emission. |
See Also |
Electron Emission (Beta- decay) . |