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A 0.25g sample of Lead-210 has a half life of 20.4 years. Will all of the Lead undergo radioactive decay in 150 years? Explain.

(I really need help on this this the last question for my assignment but i’m completely lost since i don’t think she covered how we’re supposed to solve this and explain it)

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Answer:

Using the equation A(t) = 400e-.032t

a) replace t with 4 so A(4) = 400e((-.032)(4))

The hardest part about this is making sure to use order of operations. Be certain it works like this:

A(4) = 400e-.128

A(4) = 400(.8799)

A(4) = 351.9 grams

b) A(8) = 400e((-.032)(8)) = 309.7 grams

c) A(20) = 400e((-.032)(20)) = 210.9 grams

Note here that even after 20 years, not quite half of the original amount is gone. So, we can anticipate that in finding the half life, that our answer should be slightly greater than 20 years.

d) 200 = 400e(-.032t)

Divide both sides of the equation by 400.

.5 = e(-.032t)

Change this to logarithmic form.

Ln .5 = -.032t

-.6931≈ -.032t

t ≈ 21.7 years

Step-by-step explanation:

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