Physics: radioactivity question?

In summary, potassium 44 has a half life of 20 minutes and decays to form calcium 14. A 10mg sample of potassium would contain 1.4E20 atoms and have an activity of 8E16 Bq. After 1 hour, the number of potassium atoms would decrease to 1.7E19 and have an activity of 9.8E15 Bq. The ratio of potassium atoms to calcium atoms after 1 hour would depend on whether the calcium product is stable or not.
  • #1
exequor
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You are told that potassium 44 has a half life of 20 minutes and decays to form calcium 14.

Q1. how many atoms would there be in a 10mg sample of potassium?
Answer: I used avogadro's constant to find this by: (6E23/44)*10E-3 = 1.4E20 atoms

Q2. what would be the activity of the sample?
Answer: I used -dN/dt = lamda*N ... -dN/dt = (0.693/20*60)*1.4E20 = 8E16 Bq

Q3. what would the activity be after 1 hour?
Answer: I found the number of atoms after one hour (N=No*e^(-lamba*t)) then I found the activity for that number of atoms

lamda*t = (0.6931/20)*60 = 2.1
N = No*e^(-lamba*t) = 1.4E20*e^-2.1 = 1.7E19

hence -dN/dt = (0.693/20*60)*1.7E19 = 9.8E15 Bq

Q4. what would the ratio of potassium atoms to calcium atoms be after one hour?
answer: i know what the number of potassium atoms would be after one hour (1.7E19) but since the question stated that potassium 44 decays to form calcium 14 i don't know that I have to do to obtain the answer for this?

any help would be greatly appreciated.
 
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  • #2
You need to check your isotopes and get the numbers correct. If the calcium product of the potassium decay is stable, then all the potassium atoms that decay remain as calcium atoms. If it is not stable, then you would need to know the halflife of the calcium to do the problem.
 
  • #3


To find the ratio of potassium atoms to calcium atoms after one hour, we can use the equation N(K)/N(Ca) = e^-lambda*t, where N(K) is the number of potassium atoms and N(Ca) is the number of calcium atoms. We already have the value for N(K) after one hour (1.7E19), so we just need to find the value for N(Ca).

To do this, we can use the fact that potassium 44 decays to form calcium 14. This means that for every one potassium 44 atom that decays, one calcium 14 atom is formed. Therefore, the ratio of N(K)/N(Ca) is 1:1.

Plugging this into the equation, we get 1.7E19/N(Ca) = e^-2.1, which can be rearranged to solve for N(Ca):

N(Ca) = 1.7E19/e^-2.1

N(Ca) = 1.7E19/0.122

N(Ca) = 1.4E20

Therefore, after one hour, there would be 1.7E19 potassium atoms and 1.4E20 calcium atoms, giving a ratio of 1:8.2.
 

1. What is radioactivity?

Radioactivity is the process by which an unstable atomic nucleus emits energy in the form of particles or electromagnetic waves.

2. What are the different types of radioactive decay?

The three main types of radioactive decay are alpha, beta, and gamma decay. Alpha decay releases a helium nucleus, beta decay releases an electron or positron, and gamma decay releases high-energy photons.

3. What is half-life?

Half-life is the time it takes for half of the atoms in a radioactive substance to decay. It is a measure of the rate of decay of a substance.

4. How is radioactivity measured?

The unit used to measure radioactivity is the Becquerel (Bq), which represents one radioactive decay per second. Another common unit is the curie (Ci), which represents 3.7 x 10^10 decays per second.

5. What are the practical applications of radioactivity?

Radiation from radioactive materials is used in a variety of applications such as medical imaging and cancer treatment, power generation in nuclear reactors, and in smoke detectors. It is also used in carbon dating to determine the age of archaeological artifacts.

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