Question #7f902
1 Answer
Explanation:
The idea here is that the amount of radium-226 you have in your sample will be halved with every passing half-life.
This is the case because a radioactive nuclide's nuclear half-life tells you the amount of time needed for half of an initial sample to undergo radioactive decay.
Mathematically, you can write this as
A_t = A_0 * (1/2)^color(red)(n)
Here
A_t is the amount of the radioactive nuclide that remains undecayed after a period of timet A_0 is the initial amount of the radioactive nuclidecolor(red)(n) is the number of half-lives that pass in the period of timet
Now, you know that
A_t = A_0 * 1/8
Since you know that
8 = 2 * 2 * 2 = 2^3
you can rewrite this as
A_t = A_0 * (1/2)^color(red)(3)
You can thus say that in order for the initial sample to be reduced to
Since you know that radium-226 has a half-life of
3 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("half-lives"))) * "1599 years"/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("half-life")))) = color(darkgreen)(ul(color(black)("4797 years")))
The answer is rounded to four sig figs, the number of sig figs you have for the half-life of the nuclide.
Keep in mind that you have three sig figs for the initial mass of the sample, but you're not using this value in your calculations.