Answer:
The answer is 1 [gram]
Step-by-step explanation:
The half-life of a radioactive substance is the time it takes the substance to decay to half of its original value. In other words, if I have 100grams of a substance whose half-life is 10days, then after 10-days I will only have 50grams.
The problem is simple enough because they want to know the amount of material in 10 days, and we know the definition of half-life and we know that the half-life of Barium-131 is 10 days, therefore the amount of Barium-131 left in 10 days will be half of the original mass of 2 [grams]
Further explanation with real decay equations:
The decay equation for radioactive materials is:
Where:
- N(t) is the value of the substance after "t" days
- N0 is the initial value of the substance
- k is the decay constant of the radioactive substance
- t is the period in days
To calculate the decay constant we use the following formula:
And we know the half life is 10 days, so the constant is:
Substitute the decay constant k, t=10, N0 = 2 and find N(t) in equation 1: