Radioactive Decay: Calculating Age of Archaeological Sample

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the application of radioactive decay principles, specifically focusing on carbon dating to determine the age of an archaeological sample. The original poster presents a scenario involving the decay of C-14 and its disintegration rates.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to relate the disintegration rates of C-14 to its half-life to calculate the age of the sample. Some participants suggest considering the number of half-lives that have elapsed based on the change in disintegration rates.

Discussion Status

The discussion includes attempts to calculate the age of the sample using the decay formula and the concept of half-lives. Some guidance has been provided regarding the relationship between disintegration rates and half-lives, but there is no explicit consensus on the correctness of the calculations presented.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working within the constraints of the problem, which involves specific disintegration rates and the known half-life of C-14. There is an acknowledgment of the limitations of carbon dating in terms of its effective range.

frankR
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Libby's observation that all the carbon in the world's living cycle is kept uniformly radioactive through the production of C-14 by cosmic radiation led to his development of the radioactive carbon dating method. Samples of carbon in the life cycle have been found to have a disintegration rate of 15.0 disintegrations per gram per minute. Upon death of the living organism, the life cycle ceases and the C-14 in the material decays with a half-life of 5730 years. If an archaeological sample was determined to have a disintegration rate of 0.03 disintegrations per gram per minute, how old is the sample?


This problem is killing me.

So far the real thing I've been able to find is how long the sample has been dead:

t = ln(2 &lambda No)/lambda

No = the initial number of radioactive nuclei

Can I get a hint?
 
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Well, you know that the total C-14 content decreases by a factor 1/2 during one half-life. This is of course also true for the disintegration rate. Now, you know that the disintegration rate has gone down from 15.0 to 0.03. How many half-lifes did that take?
 
Originally posted by arcnets
Well, you know that the total C-14 content decreases by a factor 1/2 during one half-life. This is of course also true for the disintegration rate. Now, you know that the disintegration rate has gone down from 15.0 to 0.03. How many half-lifes did that take?

That's an interesting way to look at the problem.

I'll see what I can do with that.

Thanks
 
I get:

t = 1.62 x 1012s

Is this correct?

Thanks

Edit:

Which is 51374 years.

I just looked up how old C-14 dating is good too. It said 50,000 years. So it looks like I'm right.

This problem was easy, I don't know why I struggled with it so much!
 
Last edited:
Originally posted by frankR
Is this correct?
Yes.
 

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