Becquerel
- For other uses, see Becquerel (disambiguation).
The becquerel (symbol Bq) is the SI derived unit of radioactivity, defined as the activity of a quantity of radioactive material in which one nucleus decays per second. It is therefore equivalent to s-1. The older unit of radioactivity was the curie (Ci), defined as 3.7×1010 becquerels or 37 GBq. The becquerel is named for Henri Becquerel, who shared a Nobel Prize with Pierre and Marie Curie for their work in discovering radioactivity.
In a fixed mass of radioactive material, the number of becquerels changes with time. Sometimes, amounts of radioactive material are given after adjustment for some period of time. For example, one might quote a ten-day adjusted figure, that is, the amount of radioactivity that will still be present after ten days. This de-emphasizes short-lived isotopes.
SI uses the becquerel rather than the second for the unit of activity measure to avoid dangerous mistakes: Becquerels are proportional to more active, and thus more dangerous sources of radiation, while seconds are inversely proportional.
Contents |
Definition
1 Bq = 1 s–1
SI multiples
| Multiple | Name | Symbol | Multiple | Name | Symbol | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 | becquerel | Bq | ||||
| 101 | decabecquerel | daBq | 10–1 | decibecquerel | dBq | |
| 102 | hectobecquerel | hBq | 10–2 | centibecquerel | cBq | |
| 103 | kilobecquerel | kBq | 10–3 | millibecquerel | mBq | |
| 106 | megabecquerel | MBq | 10–6 | microbecquerel | µBq | |
| 109 | gigabecquerel | GBq | 10–9 | nanobecquerel | nBq | |
| 1012 | terabecquerel | TBq | 10–12 | picobecquerel | pBq | |
| 1015 | petabecquerel | PBq | 10–15 | femtobecquerel | fBq | |
| 1018 | exabecquerel | EBq | 10–18 | attobecquerel | aBq | |
| 1021 | zettabecquerel | ZBq | 10–21 | zeptobecquerel | zBq | |
| 1024 | yottabecquerel | YBq | 10–24 | yoctobecquerel | yBq |
| | This SI unit is named after Henri Becquerel. As for all SI units whose names are derived from the proper name of a person, the first letter of its symbol is uppercase (Bq). But when an SI unit is spelled out, it should always be written in lowercase (becquerel), unless it begins a sentence or is the name "degree Celsius". — Based on The International System of Units, section 5.2. |
External links
- Derived units on the BIPM web site
Categories
SI derived units | Units of radioactivity | Radioactivity
