104k views
1 vote
Suppose the half-life of an element is 10 years. How many half-lives will it take before only about 6% of the original sample remains?

User Susampath
by
8.6k points

2 Answers

6 votes
You don't need to worry about the 10 year bit with this question. Just grab a calculator and divide 100/2, then the answer to that (50) by 2 etc and keep dividing by 2 until you get down to 6.25.

The answer ends up being 4 half lives :)

If you don't understand what a half life is please let me know :)
User DoppyNL
by
7.7k points
4 votes

Answer:

40.59 years

Step-by-step explanation:

Use the decay law of radioactivity


N = N_(0)e^(-\lambda t)

Where, λ is the decay constant

λ = 0.6931 / T

where, T is the half life

λ = 0.6931 / 10 = 0.06931 per year

So, N = 6% of N0


0.06 = e^(-0.06931* t)

By solving we get

t = 40.59 years

User Cobberboy
by
8.5k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.