immuno
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Hi guys
i'm having much difficulties in understanding the relations between half life, decay constant and activity.
I'll explain what i known here.
T^{\frac{1}{2}} is the half life which is the time to reduce the nuclides by half.
\lambda is the decay constant which can be solved from
\lambda = 0.693/ T^{\frac{1}{2}}. Am i correct? Where do 0.693 come from?
The decay/sec can be find out using A = -\frac{dN}{dt} = \lambda N if the half life and N is known.
I want to clarify N is in grams? So like 10g of C14 would be the No?
I don't really understand this equation:
<br /> \frac{dN}{dt} = -\lambda N<br />
i know why it is negative \lambda N as it's decreasing exponentially but what do the d and t stands for? Does the t stands for the half life? What is the use of the equation?
Thanks a bunch!
i'm having much difficulties in understanding the relations between half life, decay constant and activity.
I'll explain what i known here.
T^{\frac{1}{2}} is the half life which is the time to reduce the nuclides by half.
\lambda is the decay constant which can be solved from
\lambda = 0.693/ T^{\frac{1}{2}}. Am i correct? Where do 0.693 come from?
The decay/sec can be find out using A = -\frac{dN}{dt} = \lambda N if the half life and N is known.
I want to clarify N is in grams? So like 10g of C14 would be the No?
I don't really understand this equation:
<br /> \frac{dN}{dt} = -\lambda N<br />
i know why it is negative \lambda N as it's decreasing exponentially but what do the d and t stands for? Does the t stands for the half life? What is the use of the equation?
Thanks a bunch!