Gamma
radiation, also known as gamma rays, and denoted by the
Greek letter γ,
refers to electromagnetic
radiation of
extremely high frequency and therefore high energy per photon.
Gamma rays are ionizing
radiation,
and are thus biologically hazardous. They are classically produced by
the decay from high energy states of atomic nuclei
(gamma
decay),
but are also created by other processes. Paul
Villard,
a French chemist and physicist, discovered gamma radiation in 1900,
while studying radiation emitted from radium.
Villard's radiation was named "gamma rays" by Ernest
Rutherford in
1903.
Natural
sources of gamma rays on Earth include gamma decay from naturally
occurring radioisotopes,
and secondary radiation from atmospheric interactions with cosmic
ray particles.
Rare terrestrial natural sources produce gamma rays that are not of a
nuclear origin, such as lightning
strikesand terrestrial
gamma-ray flashes.
Additionally, gamma rays are also produced by a number of
astronomical processes in which very high-energy electrons are
produced, that in turn cause secondary gamma rays via bremsstrahlung,
inverse Compton
scattering and synchrotron
radiation.
However, a large fraction of such astronomical gamma rays are
screened by Earth's atmosphere and can only be detected by
spacecraft.
Gamma
rays typically have frequencies above 10 exahertz (or
>1019 Hz), and therefore have energies above 100 keV and
wavelengths less than 10picometers (less
than the diameter of an atom).
However, this is not a hard and fast definition, but rather only a
rule-of-thumb description for natural processes. Gamma rays
from radioactive
decay are
defined as gamma rays no matter what their energy, so that there is
no lower limit
to gamma energy derived from radioactive decay. Gamma decay commonly
produces energies of a few hundred keV,
and almost always less than 10 MeV.
In astronomy, gamma rays are defined by their energy, and no
production process need be specified. The energies of gamma rays from
astronomical sources range over 10 TeV, at a level far too large to
result from radioactive decay. A
notable example is extremely powerful bursts of high-energy radiation
normally referred to as long duration gamma-ray
bursts,
which produce gamma rays by a mechanism not compatible with
radioactive decay. These bursts of gamma rays, thought to be due to
the collapse of stars called Hypernovae,
are the most powerful events so far discovered in the cosmos.
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