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A radioactive substance decays exponentially. A scientist begins with 350 milligrams of a radioactive substance. After 14 hours, 175 mg of the substance remains. How many milligrams will remain after 20 hours

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2 votes

Answer:

N(t)=N∗.5t/h where n(t) is amount of substance left, N = initial amount, t = current time, and h = half-life time.h = 24 hours t= 45 hours, N = 130mg

therefore, N(t)=130∗.545/24=35.44mg

Explanation:

N(t)=N∗.5t/h where n(t) is amount of substance left, N = initial amount, t = current time, and h = half-life time.h = 24 hours t= 45 hours, N = 130mg

therefore, N(t)=130∗.545/24=35.44mg

User Noel Carcases
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5.1k points
2 votes

Answer:

≈ 130 mg

Explanation:

This is about the half-life of the substance.

There is a formula for this kind of calculations:

N(t)= N₀*(0.5)^(t/T), where

  • N(t) = substance left after time period of t,
  • t = time passed,
  • N₀ = initial amount of the substance,
  • T = hal-life time of the given substance.

In our case, we have:

  • N₀ = 350 mg,
  • t= 20 hours,
  • T = 14 hours as half of substance decays during this time period,

And the calculation:

  • N(20)= 350*(0.5)^(20/14)
  • N(20) ≈ 130 mg

Answer: about 130 mg of substance remains after 20 hours

User Mark Pervovskiy
by
4.6k points
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