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1. Number of radioactive emissions/counts per second – also known as “rate of decay” Activity 2. Release of alpha particle from unstable nucleus (a 2+ helium ion or a helium nucleus) Alpha emission 3. Number of protons in a nucleus Atomic number 4. Natural radiation from everyday surroundings Background radiation 5. Negatively charged subatomic particle Electron 6. Rutherford experiment where he bombarded a thin gold foil with alpha particles in a vacuum Gold foil experiment 7. Time taken for half the radioactive nuclei in a sample to decay Half life 8. Same number of protons, different number of neutrons or same element but different number of neutrons Isotope 9. Number of protons and neutrons Mass number 10. Small, dense centre of atom containing neutrons and protons Nucleus 11. Ability of radioactive emissions to pass through materials Penetrating ability 12. Emission of α, β or γ in order to transmute (change contents of nucleus) or to lose excess energy Radioactive decay 13. The way the model suggests the atom is arranged (Dalton, Thomson, Rutherford) Structure of the atom 14. Nucleus that will emit radiation Unstable nuclei 15. Chamber with no particles inside it Vacuum chamber