howcanibesmarter
Well-Known Member
How is mass defect, mass difference, energy and binding energy different? I'm kinda confused.
Here's what I do know.
Like I get the definitions, mass defect is difference in mass between nucleons and nucleus, whereas mass difference is difference between mass of products and reactants. binding energy is energy released when a nucleus is formed from its constituent nucleons. binding energy of products > binding energy of reactants means binding energy released or is it just energy?
What i don't get is the distinction between energy and binding energy, are they two separate things? Apparently energy being absorbed means a decrease in total binding energy? And that binding energy is equivalent to change in mass defect?
But doesn't this mean an increase in binding energy (increase in mass since equivalent), results in energy being released (mass difference decreases by E=mc^2), but this doesn't seem to be the case...
Here's what I do know.
Like I get the definitions, mass defect is difference in mass between nucleons and nucleus, whereas mass difference is difference between mass of products and reactants. binding energy is energy released when a nucleus is formed from its constituent nucleons. binding energy of products > binding energy of reactants means binding energy released or is it just energy?
What i don't get is the distinction between energy and binding energy, are they two separate things? Apparently energy being absorbed means a decrease in total binding energy? And that binding energy is equivalent to change in mass defect?
But doesn't this mean an increase in binding energy (increase in mass since equivalent), results in energy being released (mass difference decreases by E=mc^2), but this doesn't seem to be the case...