Half-Life (AQA GCSE Physics: Combined Science)

Revision Note

Test yourself
Ashika

Author

Ashika

Last updated

Did this video help you?

Half-Life

  • It is impossible to know when a particular unstable nucleus will decay
  • But the rate at which the activity of a sample decreases can be known
    • This is known as the half-life

  • Half-life is defined as:

The time it takes for the number of nuclei of a sample of radioactive isotopes to decrease by half

  • In other words, the time it takes for the activity of a sample to fall to half its original level
  • Different isotopes have different half-lives and half-lives can vary from a fraction of a second to billions of years in length

Using Half-life

  • Scientists can measure the half-lives of different isotopes accurately:
  • Uranium-235 has a half-life of 704 million years
    • This means it would take 704 million years for the activity of a uranium-235 sample to decrease to half its original amount

  • Carbon-14 has a half-life of 5700 years
    • So after 5700 years, there would be 50% of the original amount of carbon-14 remaining
    • After two half-lives, or 11 400 years, there would be just 25% of the carbon-14 remaining

  • With each half-life, the amount remaining decreases by half

Half-life Graph, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes

The diagram shows how the activity of a radioactive sample changes over time. Each time the original activity halves, another half-life has passed

  • The time it takes for the activity of the sample to decrease from 100 % to 50 % is the half-life
  • It is the same length of time as it would take to decrease from 50 % activity to 25 % activity
  • The half-life is constant for a particular isotope

Calculating Half-Life

  • To calculate the half-life of a sample, the procedure is:
    • Measure the initial activity, A0, of the sample
    • Determine the half-life of this original activity
    • Measure how the activity changes with time

  • The time taken for the activity to decrease to half its original value is the half-life

Worked example

The radioisotope technetium is used extensively in medicine. The graph below shows how the activity of a sample varies with time.Worked Example - Half Life Curve, downloadable AS & A Level Physics revision notesDetermine the half-life of this material.

Step 1: Draw lines on the graph to determine the time it takes for technetium to drop to half of its original activity

Worked Example - Half Life Curve Ans a, downloadable AS & A Level Physics revision notes

Step 2: Read the half-life from the graph

    • In the diagram above the initial activity, A0, is 8 × 107 Bq
    • The time taken to decrease to 4 × 107 Bq, or ½ A0, is 6 hours
    • The time taken to decrease to 2 × 107 Bq is 6 more hours
    • The time taken to decrease to 1 × 107 Bq is 6 more hours
    • Therefore, the half-life of this isotope is 6 hours

Worked example

A particular radioactive sample contains 2 million un-decayed atoms. After a year, there are only 500 000 atoms left un-decayed. What is the half-life of this material?

Step 1: Calculate how many times the number of un-decayed atoms has halved

    • There were 2 000 000 atoms to start with
    • 1 000 000 atoms would remain after 1 half-life
    • 500 000 atoms would remain after 2 half-lives
    • Therefore, the sample has undergone 2 half-lives

Step 2: Divide the time period by the number of half-lives

    • The time period is a year
    • The number of half-lives is 2

2 space 000 space 000 space rightwards arrow from 6 space months to 1 space half space life of space 1 space 000 space 000 space rightwards arrow from 1 space year to 2 space half space lives of space 500 space 000

    • So two half-lives is 1 year, and one half-life is 6 months
    • Therefore, the half-life of the sample is 6 months

You've read 0 of your 10 free revision notes

Unlock more, it's free!

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Ashika

Author: Ashika

Expertise: Physics Project Lead

Ashika graduated with a first-class Physics degree from Manchester University and, having worked as a software engineer, focused on Physics education, creating engaging content to help students across all levels. Now an experienced GCSE and A Level Physics and Maths tutor, Ashika helps to grow and improve our Physics resources.