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Element X decays radioactively with a half life of 8 minutes. If there are 170
a
grams of Element X, how long, to the nearest tenth of a minute, would it take
the element to decay to 5 grams?
y = a(.5)


Sagot :

A time of 40.7 minutes is taken for 170 grams of element X to decay to 5 grams.

How to analyze a radioactive decay case

Let suppose that element X experiments a simple radioactive decay, that is, that the element X becomes gradually into another less radioactive stable element in time.

We know that decay behaves exponentially and follows this model:

[tex]m(t) = m_{o}\cdot e^{-\frac{t}{\tau} }[/tex]   (1)

Where:

  • [tex]m_{o}[/tex] - Initial mass, in grams
  • t - Time, in minutes
  • τ - Time constant, in minutes
  • m(t) - Current mass, in grams

The time constant can be described in terms of half-life ([tex]t_{1/2}[/tex]), in minutes, through the following expression:

[tex]\tau = \frac{t_{1/2}}{\ln 2}[/tex]   (2)

If we know that [tex]t_{1/2} = 8\,min[/tex], [tex]m_{o} = 170\,g[/tex] and [tex]m(t) = 5\,g[/tex], then the time needed for the decay is:

τ ≈ 11.541 min

[tex]t = -\tau \cdot \ln \frac{m(t)}{m_{o}}[/tex]

t ≈ 40.698 min

A time of 40.7 minutes is taken for 170 grams of element X to decay to 5 grams. [tex]\blacksquare[/tex]

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