Yes
Yes, alpha radiation is an ionizing radiation.
alpha particle, He nucleus
Three types of radiation are given off, depending on the exact reaction. The radiations are called alpha, beta, and gamma radiation. Alpha radiation consists of helium nuclei; beta radiation consists of electrons or positrons; gamma radiation consists of high-energy photons (electromagnetic radiation).
Yes, alpha radiation is an ionizing radiation.
No. Decay is the process, radiation is the product.
No. Alpha radiation can trigger chemical reactions, but it cannot change the fact that helium does not form stable chemical bonds. Even if you could find a way of forcing such compounds together, they would spontaneously decompose.
If you mean "alpha radiation", that is the result of certain types of radioactive decay.
Nuclear chemistry deals with the chemical reactions involving radioactive elements. Gamma radiation is due to the electromagnetic force, beta radiation is due to the weak nuclear force, and alpha radiation is due to the residual strong force (which you might call the strong nuclear force). So... if you didn't have the nuclear force, you wouldn't have alpha radiation.
becouse the human activities also produced as a result radiation orginate
Yes, alpha radiation is an ionizing radiation.
alpha particle, He nucleus
Three types of radiation are given off, depending on the exact reaction. The radiations are called alpha, beta, and gamma radiation. Alpha radiation consists of helium nuclei; beta radiation consists of electrons or positrons; gamma radiation consists of high-energy photons (electromagnetic radiation).
Yes, alpha radiation is an ionizing radiation.
Alpha (and beta) radiation is "particle radiation" Gamma is electro-magnetic radiation.
The radiation originates in the atom, usually in the nucleus of the atom as a result of the atom being split.
No. Decay is the process, radiation is the product.
A zinc sulfide scintillator probe is used to detect alpha radiation. The scintillator probe is just sensitive to alpha radiation.