Half-Life Functions Questions & Answers

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Half-life functions for nuclear particle decay reactions are mathematically represented by the decaying exponential model, N=N0e-kt, which is applicable primarily to large samples. The initial amount of radioactive species (N0) is necessary to determine the half-life by measuring the remaining quantity over time. While the shape of the decay function is consistent across different isotopes, it does not provide insights into the underlying causes of nuclear decay, which are better understood through gauge theories related to specific interactions. Despite advancements in quantum mechanics and the standard model, the exact timing of individual nucleus decay remains unpredictable, with only average behaviors being forecasted for large groups. Understanding the spontaneous nature of decay continues to be a complex topic in nuclear physics.
drag
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Greetings !

I'd like to ask a few questions about
half-life (not the PC game :wink:) functions:

1. Are they of the same shape for all
nuclear particle decay reactions currently
known and observed ?

2. What is the function mathematicly (and
it's relevant shape of course) ?

3. What are the physical parameters if they
are known (I guess not though) ?

4. Can the shape of the function help find
a solution to the cause of the nuclear decay
(if there is such a thing at all) ?

Thanks ! :smile:

Live long and prosper.
 
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Originally posted by drag
1. Are they of the same shape for all
nuclear particle decay reactions currently
known and observed ?

Do you mean N=N0e-kt?

That is valid only for large samples, as it treats the number of radioactive species as continuous. But yes, that can be used to model large samples of any radioisotope.

2. What is the function mathematicly (and
it's relevant shape of course) ?

See above: Decaying exponential.

3. What are the physical parameters if they
are known (I guess not though) ?

You need to know the initial amount of radioactive species (N0). You can find the half life by measuring the amount of radioactive species at some later time.

4. Can the shape of the function help find
a solution to the cause of the nuclear decay
(if there is such a thing at all) ?

No, it cannot. For that you have to look at the gauge theories describing the appropriate reaction. For instance, α-decay is a strong interaction, and β-decay is a weak interaction.

Thanks ! :smile:

No, thank you for getting me out of the philosophy forum. I needed some air!
 
Is it understood why an atom will decay when it does, or does it just still seem spontaneous even after someone understands quantum mechanics, standard model, etc.
 
It is indeed impossible to predict when any single nucleus will decay. All we can do is predict averages over large samples.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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