Question
(a) Calculate the radius of 58Ni^{58}\textrm{Ni}, one of the most tightly bound stable nuclei. (b) What is the ratio of the radius of 58Ni^{58}\textrm{Ni} to that of 258Ha^{258}\textrm{Ha}, one of the largest nuclei ever made? Note that the radius of the largest nucleus is still much smaller than the size of an atom.
Question by OpenStax is licensed under CC BY 4.0
Final Answer
  1. $4.6\textrm{ fm}4
  2. 0.610.61

Solution video

OpenStax College Physics, Chapter 31, Problem 9 (Problems & Exercises)

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Video Transcript
This is College Physics Answers with Shaun Dychko. To calculate the radius of a nucleon, we use this formula—r naught times the mass number to the power of one-third. For nickel 58, there are 58 nucelons so that's the mass number, we raise that to the power of one-third multiplied by r naught which is 1.2 femtometers and this gives 4.6 femtometers. And then in part (b), we are asked to figure out the ratio of the radius of the nickel nuclide to the radius of the hahnium nuclide. So that's r naught times the mass number of nickel to the power of one-third divided by r naught times the mass number of hahnium to the power of one-third. The r naught's cancel and we can take this fraction and raise it all to the power of one-third. So that's 58 divided by 258 to the power of one-third which is 0.61.