half-life

(noun)

the time required for half of the nuclei in a sample of a specific isotope to undergo radioactive decay

Related Terms

  • decay
  • radionuclide
  • radioisotope

Examples of half-life in the following topics:

  • Calculations Involving Half-Life and Decay-Rates

    • The half-life of a radionuclide is the time taken for half the radionuclide's atoms to decay.
    • The half-life of a radionuclide is the time taken for half of the radionuclide's atoms to decay.
    • A half-life must not be thought of as the time required for exactly half of the atoms to decay.
    • Note that after one half-life there are not exactly one-half of the atoms remaining; there are only approximately one-half left because of the random variation in the process.
    • The problems are taken from "The Joy of Physics. " This one deals with radioactive half-life.
  • Half-Life and Rate of Decay; Carbon-14 Dating

    • Carbon-14 has a relatively short half-life of 5,730 years, meaning that the fraction of carbon-14 in a sample is halved over the course of 5,730 years due to radioactive decay to nitrogen-14.
    • Describes radioactive half life and how to do some simple calculations using half life.
  • Radioactive Decay Series: Introduction

    • Because of this exponential nature, one of the properties of an isotope is its half-life, the time by which half of an initial number of identical parent radioisotopes have decayed to their daughters.
    • Half-lives have been determined in laboratories for thousands of radioisotopes (radionuclides).
    • These half-lives can range from nearly nonexistent spans of time to as much as $10^{19}$ years or more.
    • When equilibrium is achieved, a granddaughter isotope is present in proportion to its half-life.
    • But, since its activity is inversely proportional to its half-life, any nuclide in the decay chain finally contributes as much as the head of the chain.
  • Natural Radioactivity

    • Because of this, the present activity on Earth from uranium-238 is only half as much as it originally was because of its 4.5-billion-year half-life.
    • Potassium-40 (with a half-life of 1.25 billion years) is at about eight percent of its original activity.
    • This is because humans evolved too recently for the difference in activity over a fraction of a half-life to be significant.
    • Put another way, human history is so short in comparison to a half-life of a billion years that the activity of these long-lived isotopes has been effectively constant throughout our time on this planet.
    • Many shorter-half-life and therefore more intensely radioactive isotopes have not decayed out of the terrestrial environment because they are still being produced.
  • Nuclear Stability

    • Also, only four naturally occurring, radioactive odd-odd nuclides have a half-life greater than a billion years:
    • All elements form a number of radionuclides, although the half-lives of many are so short that they are not observed in nature.
    • For every chemical element, many radioisotopes that do not occur in nature (due to short half-lives or the lack of a natural production source) have been produced artificially.
  • Beta Decay

    • In nature, most isotopes are beta-stable, but there exist a few exceptions with half-lives so long that they have not had enough time to decay since the moment of their nucleosynthesis.
    • One example is the odd-proton odd-neutron nuclide 40 K, which undergoes both types of beta decay with a half-life of 1.277 ยท109 years.
  • Water Waves

    • Water waves can be commonly observed in daily life, and comprise both transverse and longitudinal wave motion.
    • When waves propagate in shallow water (where the depth is less than half the wavelength), the particle trajectories are compressed into ellipses.
    • Deep water corresponds with a water depth larger than half the wavelength, as is a common case in the sea and ocean.
    • The deep-water group velocity is half the phase velocity.
  • The requirements for life

  • Requirements for plant and animal life

  • The development of life on Earth

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