AQA A-Level Physics/Radioactive decay

From testwiki
Revision as of 02:52, 4 September 2022 by imported>SHB2000 (radioactve->radioactive - Fix a typo in one click)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Radioactive decay is when an unstable nucleus decays in a random manner.

In theory, there is no end to the life of a radioactive substance (the time it takes before the activity reaches zero)therefore the quantity used for dealing with the life of radioactive substances is the half life. Half life is defined as the time taken for the activity of the sample to halve. The half life remains the same throughout the life of the sample. Each type of element has a distinct half life, t12. As the activity of the sample is proportional to the number of radioactive nuclides present the half time can also be calculated by the time taken for half of the radioactive nuclides in the sample to decay.

If you plot a graph of the natural logarithm of N (the number of radioactive nuclides) against time you will see that there is a linear relationship between the two. The steeper the gradient the more quickly the substance will decay which means it has a shorter half life. Half life is proportional to 1λ

Equations

ΔNΔt=λN

N=N0eλt

t12=ln2λ

A=λN

Derivations of equations

Note - given that all equations above are provided in the AQA Formula booklet (which is provided in the exam), it is not necessary to memorise all of the equations, but it is a good idea to learn what the different symbols stand for.

Deriving N=N0eλt

We can use this differential equation to derive an equation for N.

dNdt=λN

Separating and integrating:

1NdN=λdt

ln(N)=λt+c

N=N0eλt

Deriving t1/2=ln2λ

Half life is the time taken for half of the atoms that were originally present in the sample to have decayed.

N(t)=N0eλt

If we replace N0 with 1, Nt with 12, and t with t12 we get:

12=eλt12

λt12=ln12

t12=ln2λ

If you wanted to know the 1n of a substance, you can replace the two with a 'n'

t1n=ln(n)λ Template:BookCat