Ice-cream Posted November 6, 2004 Posted November 6, 2004 Can any1 help me with this question? The radioisotope cesium-137 has a half-life of 30 years. A sample decayed at the rate of 544 counts per minute (cpm) in the year 1985. In what year will the decay rate by 17cpm? (ans: 2135)
Sayonara Posted November 6, 2004 Posted November 6, 2004 I'm sure someone will be able to help if you say which part of the question you are stuck on.
swansont Posted November 6, 2004 Posted November 6, 2004 Can any1 help me with this question?The radioisotope cesium-137 has a half-life of 30 years. A sample decayed at the rate of 544 counts per minute (cpm) in the year 1985. In what year will the decay rate by 17cpm? (ans: 2135) [math]A = A_0 e^-^\lambda^t[/math] [math]\lambda[/math] = ln(2)/t1/2 A is activity (decays per unit time) Have at it...
Gilded Posted November 6, 2004 Posted November 6, 2004 Talking about this sort of calculations, in my recent math test I had something like this: C-14 has a half-life of 5700 years (yeah, actually it's 5730). Then I had to make a function that has x as the amount of years passed, and with an outcome that tells how much of the C-14 is still left. Like if the x is 5700, then the outcome is 0.5, and if the x is 1, the outcome is something like 0.999 or so. I had NO idea how to do this sort of calculations (no matter how much we've practiced it before the test ). What's the correct function for this?
swansont Posted November 6, 2004 Posted November 6, 2004 [math] A=\lambda N[/math] Pop that into the equation for activity and you get # of atoms as a function of time. You can also use N=N0(1/2)n, where n is the number of half-lives that have passed. You should be able to convince yourself that the two equations are equivalent.
Gilded Posted November 6, 2004 Posted November 6, 2004 Oh bugger. I would have earned 6 (of maximum 36) points if I knew it was that easy. So... When a year has passed, the C-14 amount is approximately 99.9879% of the original amount (if we use 5730 years as the half-life time)?
Ice-cream Posted November 6, 2004 Author Posted November 6, 2004 does any1 know of complex type questions of radioactive decay coz i need some practice but i'm always getting the same sort of questions...or does any1 know of any sites thats got some more complex sort of radioactive decay questions?
swansont Posted November 7, 2004 Posted November 7, 2004 So... When a year has passed, the C-14 amount is approximately 99.9879% of the original amount (if we use 5730 years as the half-life time)? Right.
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