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Nuclear Physics 5 Exponential Decay Friday, 16 November 2018

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1 Nuclear Physics 5 Exponential Decay Friday, 16 November 2018
Leeds City College

2 Exponential Decay The fraction of atoms decaying at any given time is constant. In this diagram, we see that after t1 seconds, 80 % of the atoms are left. After t2 seconds 0.8 × 0.8 = 64 % are left. The half life is the time taken for 50 % of the atoms to decay. After 2 half lives, 25 % remain. Friday, 16 November 2018 Leeds City College

3 Decay Constant The decay constant is the proportion of the sample that are likely to decay in unit time. It is described by the equation: The minus sign shows that the number of atoms left is going down. The change in number per unit time can be measured as the activity: Friday, 16 November 2018 Leeds City College

4 Exponential Decay Equation
For longer periods of time, a different but related equation is used. It is derived from the previous equation by calculus. You are not required to know this derivation. N – number of atoms remaining; N0 – original number of atoms. e – the exponential number = 2.718… l – the decay constant (s-1); t – time (s) Friday, 16 November 2018 Leeds City College

5 Half Life Half life is the time taken for half the remaining atoms to decay. Rearrange Rearranging: Minus signs cancel out Which gives: This can be written as: Take natural logarithms: Friday, 16 November 2018 Leeds City College


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