The half life of the radioactive element Strontium-90 is 37 years. In 1950, 15 kilograms of this element released accidentally. How do you determine the formula which shows the mass remaining after t years?

1 Answer
Apr 4, 2017

N(t) = 15Kgxx(1/2)^(t/color(red)37)

Note: The half life of Strontium-90 is now published as 28.8 years. This will require adjustments of all the following values in color(red)(red).

Explanation:

The formula for the half life of an exponentially decaying substance is:

N(t)=(No)xx(1/2)^(t/(t1/2))

N(t) ... is how much is still here.
No ... is how much we started with.
t ...... is the time we have measured since the start of the decay.
t1/2 ... is the already calculated half life of the specific substance.

To calculate the mass of Strontium-90 remaining after t years, plug in the given values into the formula:

N(t) = 15Kgxx(1/2)^(t/color(red)37)

For example color(red)37 years after 1950, the remainder of the 15Kg of Strontium-90 released would be:

N(67) = 15Kgxx(1/2)^color(red)(37/37) = 15Kgxx(1/2) = 7.5Kg

In 2017 (now) the amount left is 15Kg xx (1/2)^color(red)1.8 = color(red)4.3Kg