Exponential Growth and Decay Cont.
Half-Life
We now turn to exponential decay. One of the common terms associated with exponential decay, as stated above, is half-life. Every radioactive isotope has a half-life, and the process describing the exponential decay of an isotope is called radioactive decay.
half-life
Half-life is the length of time it takes an exponentially decaying quantity to decrease to half its original amount.
[latex]t = \frac{\ln\left(\frac{1}{2}\right)}{r}[/latex]
One such application is in science, in calculating the time it takes for half of the unstable material in a sample of a radioactive substance to decay, called its half-life. The table below lists the half-life for several of the more common radioactive substances.
Substance | Use | Half-life |
---|---|---|
gallium-67 | nuclear medicine | [latex]80[/latex] hours |
cobalt-60 | manufacturing | [latex]5.3[/latex] years |
technetium-99m | nuclear medicine | [latex]6[/latex] hours |
americium-241 | construction | [latex]432[/latex] years |
carbon-14 | archeological dating | [latex]5,715[/latex] years |
uranium-235 | atomic power | [latex]703,800,000[/latex] years |
We can see how widely the half-lives for these substances vary. Knowing the half-life of a substance allows us to calculate the amount remaining after a specified time. We can use the formula for radioactive decay:
[latex]\begin{array}{l}A\left(t\right)={A}_{0}{e}^{\frac{\mathrm{ln}\left(0.5\right)}{T}t}\hfill \\ A\left(t\right)={A}_{0}{e}^{\mathrm{ln}\left(0.5\right)\frac{t}{T}}\hfill \\ A\left(t\right)={A}_{0}{\left({e}^{\mathrm{ln}\left(0.5\right)}\right)}^{\frac{t}{T}}\hfill \\ A\left(t\right)={A}_{0}{\left(\frac{1}{2}\right)}^{\frac{t}{T}}\hfill \end{array}[/latex]
where
- [latex]{A}_{0}[/latex] is the amount initially present
- [latex]T[/latex] is the half-life of the substance
- [latex]t[/latex] is the time period over which the substance is studied
- [latex]A[/latex], or [latex]A(t)[/latex], is the amount of the substance present after time [latex]t[/latex]
- Write [latex]A={A}_{o}{e}^{kt}[/latex].
- Replace [latex]A[/latex] by [latex]\frac{1}{2}{A}_{0}[/latex] and replace [latex]t[/latex] by the given half-life.
- Solve to find [latex]k[/latex]. Express [latex]k[/latex] as an exact value (do not round).
Note: It is also possible to find the decay rate using [latex]k=-\frac{\mathrm{ln}\left(2\right)}{t}[/latex].
Radiocarbon Dating
The formula for radioactive decay is important in radiocarbon dating which is used to calculate the approximate date a plant or animal died. Radiocarbon dating was discovered in 1949 by Willard Libby who won a Nobel Prize for his discovery. It compares the difference between the ratio of two isotopes of carbon in an organic artifact or fossil to the ratio of those two isotopes in the air. It is believed to be accurate to within about [latex]1\%[/latex] error for plants or animals that died within the last [latex]60,000[/latex] years.
Carbon-14 is a radioactive isotope of carbon that has a half-life of [latex]5,730[/latex] years. It occurs in small quantities in the carbon dioxide in the air we breathe. Most of the carbon on Earth is carbon-12 which has an atomic weight of [latex]12[/latex] and is not radioactive. Scientists have determined the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12 in the air for the last [latex]60,000[/latex] years using tree rings and other organic samples of known dates—although the ratio has changed slightly over the centuries.
As long as a plant or animal is alive, the ratio of the two isotopes of carbon in its body is close to the ratio in the atmosphere. When it dies, the carbon-14 in its body decays and is not replaced. By comparing the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12 in a decaying sample to the known ratio in the atmosphere, the date the plant or animal died can be approximated.
Since the half-life of carbon-14 is [latex]5,730[/latex] years, the formula for the amount of carbon-14 remaining after [latex]t[/latex] years is
[latex]A\approx {A}_{0}{e}^{\left(\frac{\mathrm{ln}\left(0.5\right)}{5730}\right)t}[/latex]
where
- [latex]A[/latex] is the amount of carbon-14 remaining
- [latex]{A}_{0}[/latex] is the amount of carbon-14 when the plant or animal began decaying.
To find the age of an object we solve this equation for [latex]t[/latex]:
[latex]t=\frac{\mathrm{ln}\left(\frac{A}{{A}_{0}}\right)}{-0.000121}[/latex]
From the equation [latex]A\approx {A}_{0}{e}^{-0.000121t}[/latex] we know the ratio of the percentage of carbon-14 in the object we are dating to the percentage of carbon-14 in the atmosphere is [latex]r=\frac{A}{{A}_{0}}\approx {e}^{-0.000121t}[/latex]. We solve this equation for [latex]t[/latex], to get
[latex]t=\frac{\mathrm{ln}\left(r\right)}{-0.000121}[/latex]
- Express the given percentage of carbon-14 as an equivalent decimal [latex]r[/latex].
- Substitute for [latex]r[/latex] in the equation [latex]t=\frac{\mathrm{ln}\left(r\right)}{-0.000121}[/latex] and solve for the age, [latex]t[/latex].