hamzah Posted April 26, 2004 Posted April 26, 2004 At time t hours, the rate of decay of the mass of a radioactive substance is proportional to the mass x kg at that time. (a) Write down the differential equation satisfied by x. (b) Given that x = C when t = 0, show that x = Ce^[-(at)], where a is a positive constant. I can't figure out part (a)...so I cant do part (b). So if somebody could help me with part (a) please. thanks
schlieffen Posted April 26, 2004 Posted April 26, 2004 (a) change of mass over change in time, (dx/dt) = ax (where a is the constant) Now all you have to do is solve that DE and part (b) should work itself out
bloodhound Posted April 26, 2004 Posted April 26, 2004 [math] \[ \begin{array}{c} \frac{{dx}}{{dt}} = - ax \\ \frac{1}{x}dx = - a{\rm{ }}dt \\ \ln x = - at + k \\ x = e^{ - at + k} \\ x = e^k e^{ - at} \\ x = Ce^{ - at} \\ \end{array} \] [/math] at the second to last line. we know x=c when t=0 . pluggin the values in we get e^k = C
Dave Posted April 26, 2004 Posted April 26, 2004 That's the basic decay equation that you'll get for a number of applications (radioactive decay, newton's cooling curve, capacitor discharge, etc). Incidentally, the line where you say [math]\tfrac{1}{x} \, dx = -a \, dt[/math] is not technically correct. What you're actually doing is this: [math]\frac{dx}{dt} = -ax \Rightarrow \int \frac{1}{x} \frac{dx}{dt} \, dt = \int -a \, dt[/math] Then using the chain rule to 'cancel' the dt's from the left hand side integral.
bloodhound Posted April 26, 2004 Posted April 26, 2004 yes dave. thanks for pointing that out. i was aware of that. but treating dx/dt as a fraction is probably the better way to teach pple who are challenged in the art of calculus
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