Half-Life of Radioactive Materials
Much like population problems, half-life problems concern a population, but one of atoms of radioactive materials where half the atoms change over time into atoms of a different substance. For example, Carbon-14 decays into Nitrogen-14, and it takes about 5,730 years for half the carbon to decay. This makes radiocarbon dating a crucial tool in everything from archaeology to detecting forged artworks.
Exercise 12.08: Measuring Radioactive Decay
Radium-226 has a half-life of 1,600 years. How much of the radium in a given sample will disappear in 800 years?
The differential equation meaning "the rate of decay of a substance is proportional to the amount of the substance" is expressed like this:
The solution is similar to that for our population problems, except that the decay factor is negative, since the amount decreases: