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Question

Question: Define half-life of a radioactive substance....

Define half-life of a radioactive substance.

Explanation

Solution

Hint: Radioactive substances are elements with unstable nuclei which emits radiation to become stable. Express the number of elements after radioactive emission for time t. Describe the half-life of the radioactive element. Find the mathematical formula by considering that the number of radioactive elements will be reduced to half after the half-life of the radioactive element.

Complete step by step answer: Radioactive substance or radioactive elements are made of atoms which have unstable nuclei. To make these atoms stable these substances emit radiation which is called the radioactive emission.

All radioactive substances emit radiation. After emission the radioactive element transforms into another element. Half-life of a radioactive substance can be defined as the time taken by the substance to reduce to half due to radioactive decay.

Let the original no of atoms in a radioactive substance is N0{{N}_{0}}. After being decayed for a certain time t, the no of atoms remains is NN. We can define a relation between these two quantities given as,

N=N0eλtN={{N}_{0}}{{e}^{-\lambda t}}
Where, λ\lambda is the decay constant of the element.

Now, half life is defined as the time at which the original number of atoms reduced to half because of radioactive emission. So, let the half-life is t12{{t}_{\dfrac{1}{2}}}, when the no of atoms becomes N/2N/2 from NN .
So, we can write,
N2=Neλt12\dfrac{N}{2}=N{{e}^{-\lambda {{t}_{\dfrac{1}{2}}}}}
Taking log\log on both side of the equation, we get,

ln(N2)=ln(Neλt12) lnNln2=lnN+lneλt12 ln2=λt12 λ=ln2t12 \begin{aligned} & \ln \left( \dfrac{N}{2} \right)=\ln \left( N{{e}^{-\lambda {{t}_{\dfrac{1}{2}}}}} \right) \\\ & \ln N-\ln 2=\ln N+\ln {{e}^{-\lambda {{t}_{\dfrac{1}{2}}}}} \\\ & -\ln 2=-\lambda {{t}_{\dfrac{1}{2}}} \\\ & \lambda =\dfrac{\ln 2}{{{t}_{\dfrac{1}{2}}}} \\\ \end{aligned}

Putting the value of ln20.693\ln 2\approx 0.693 in the above equation, we get,
λ=0.693t12\lambda =\dfrac{0.693}{{{t}_{\dfrac{1}{2}}}}

So, we can write,
t12=0.693λ{{t}_{\dfrac{1}{2}}}=\dfrac{0.693}{\lambda }
This is the formula for finding the half-life of a radioactive element.

Note: The decay constant will be different for different elements. So, the half-life of the elements will also be different depending on the value of the decay constant. If the decay constant is large for an element then the half-life of the element will be small and if the decay constant is small then the half-life of the element will be large.