Radioactive Decay Now, let’s see how we can use the half-life rate to

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Radioactive Isotopes and Half Life
Advertisements

Absolute Dating Radioactive Dating. Radioactivity Almost all of the elements contain radioactive isotopes Isotopes are atoms of the same element with.
 Hand in any work needed.  Get out a small piece of paper, PUT YOUR NAME ON IT.  When bell rings the quiz will start and you will have 1 minute per.
Half-Life and Radioisotope Dating
Radioactive Decay Radioactive elements are unstable. They decay, change, into different elements over time. Here are some facts to remember: The half-life.
Mr. ShieldsRegents Chemistry U02 L03 Nuclear Decay Series Uranium has an atomic number greater than 83. Therefore it is naturally radioactive. Most abundant.
illustrate the concept of half-life.
Age Dating Rocks.
Absolute Dating of Rocks and Strata
Radioactivity Lab Prompt
Absolute Dating : A Measure of Time
Radioactive Decay Please open up your journal to your chemistry unit and write a definition of an isotope at the beginning of these notes.
Goal:  I will be able to explain what relative and absolute age are and how we determine them.  I will be able to explain the Law of Superposition, including.
Geologic History: Absolute Dating Unit 6 Absolute Age.
Absolute Dating Notes and Practice. Directions: Use the following presentation to complete the notes sheet.
Unit 7 Lesson 3 Absolute Dating
Radioactive Isotopes and Half Life 1. What is a Radioactive Isotope? What is Radioactive Decay? What is Half Life? 2.
7.2 Half-Life the time it takes for half of a radioactive sample to decay is a constant rate (always the same half life for each element) Example: Strontium-90.
7.2 Half-life.
1 Clip. 2 Radioactivity An unstable atomic nucleus emits a form of radiation (alpha, beta, or gamma) to become stable. In other words, the nucleus decays.
Determining Absolute Time.  Absolute Time: numerical time using a specific units like years  Isotopes: Form of an element with more or fewer neutrons.
(c) McGraw Hill Ryerson Half-life It can be difficult to determine the ages of objects by sight alone.  Radioactivity provides a method to determine.
Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Earth Systems 3209 Unit: 2 Historical Geology Reference: Chapters 6, 8; Appendix.
CARBON DATING Determining the actual age of fossils.
History of Life: Origins of Life Chapter Age of Earth The earth is about 4.5 billion years old How did we measure that? Radiometric Dating = calculating.
Do Now: Think about this… If you were standing 10 feet from the wall, and I asked you to walk half the distance to the wall, how close would you be? If.
(c) McGraw Hill Ryerson Half-life It can be difficult to determine the ages of objects by sight alone.  Radioactivity provides a method to determine.
Absolute Dating Throughout the centuries mankind has striven to try to determine the exact age of Earth. What these people were seeking was a numerical.
Copyright © 2014 All rights reserved, Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Earth Systems 3209 Unit: 2 Historical Geology Reference: Chapters 6, 8; Appendix.
Carbon dating  Dates of very old materials are determined using carbon-14 or C- 14 dating.  It can only be used on things once alive.  This is done.
Tips on Dating. Why Date? Different methods of dating will help determine the actual age of a layer of rock or a fossil Scientists look at how much radioactive.
Radiometric Dating Continuation of Journal Entry #5.
RADIOCARBON DATING Students will: understand the half-life of an isotope.
Radioactive Half-life
ABSOLUTE AGE: Measurements of natural radioactivity in rocks have allowed scientists to understand the numerical age of an object in years.
The fossil below is that of a Coelophysis and was found in upstate N.Y. Approximately how old is the rock?
Dating Rocks and Remains Radioactive Decay: Vocabulary Half-Life: The amount of time it takes for half of a radioactive isotope to decay. Radioactive.
Carbon Dating The age of a formerly living thing can be determined by carbon dating As soon as a living organism dies, it stops taking in new carbon.
The half-life of a radioactive isotope explains the amount of time that it takes half of the isotope in a sample to decay.
Key vocab: What is a Radioactive Isotope? What is Radioactive Decay? What is Half Life?
Some elements have atoms which are unstable. These atoms spontaneously transmutate from one element to another. These types of transmutations include.
Chapter 7.2 – Half life Science 10. Types of decay Alpha Alpha.
Absolute Age Finding a rock’s birthday. Absolute Age? Give an example of an absolute age of a rock layer… That rock layer is 200 million years old. Remember,
Nuclear Chemistry. Chemical ReactionsNuclear Reactions - Occur when bonds are broken or formed -Occur when the nucleus emits particles or rays -Atoms.
Wednesday, November 4 th, 2015 The blue grid below represents a quantity of C 14. Each time you click, one half-life goes by and turns red. C 14 – blue.
Unit 2 Lesson 3 Absolute Dating Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
How Do We Know the Age of the Earth? February 26 th, 2015.
ABSOLUTE-AGE DATING: A MEASURE OF GEOLOGIC TIME. THINK ABOUT IT… How old is the Earth? Can it be determined? What are some tools or methods that scientists.
Do First Actions: Turn in yesterday’s worksheet 1. List the layers from youngest to oldest.
Absolute Dating.
Nature’s Clock.  When sedimentary rock is deposited in layers it is deposited horizontally.  Scientists use this “Principle of Original Horizontality”
ABSOLUTE AGE DATING Absolute Age Dating is finding the numerical age of an object Artifacts (rocks or fossils) contain radioactive elements which are.
Applications. The half-life of a radioactive substance is the time it takes for half of the atoms of the substance to become disintegrated. All life on.
Nuclear Radiation.
Review of Radiation Click here for review
Radioactive Decay Radioactive elements are unstable. They decay, change, into different elements over time. Here are some facts to remember: The half-life.
Radioactive Isotopes and Half Life
Reactions involving the nucleus of the atom.
Measuring the speed of radioactive decay
Nuclear Energy.
Radioactive Decay Radioactive elements are unstable. They decay, change, into different elements over time. Here are some facts to remember: The half-life.
Radioactive Decay L.O: SWBAT model how Carbon-14 is used to determine the age of recent fossils.
Radioactive Isotopes and Half Life
Radioactivity provides a method to determine the age of a material
NUCLEAR DECAY.
Elements Atoms and Nuclear
Radioactive Isotopes and Half Life
Radioactive Isotopes and Half Life
Radioactive Decay Radioactive elements are unstable. They decay, change, into different elements over time. Here are some facts to remember: The half-life.
Radioactive Isotopes and Half Life
Presentation transcript:

Radioactive Decay Now, let’s see how we can use the half-life rate to Radioactive elements are unstable. They decay (change) into different elements over time. Here are some facts to remember: The half-life of an element is the time it takes for half of the material you started with to decay. Remember, it doesn’t matter how much you start with. After 1 half-life, half of it will have decayed. Each element has it’s own half-life ( ESRT page). Each element decays into a new element (ESRT page 1) C14 decays into N14 while U238 decays into Pb206 (lead), etc. The half-life of each element is constant. Now, let’s see how we can use the half-life rate to determine the age of a rock or other object.

The grid below represents a quantity of C14. Each time you click, one half-life goes by. Try it! C14 – blue N14 - red Half lives % C14 %N14 Ratio of C14 to N14 100% 0% no ratio As we begin notice that no time has gone by and that 100% of the material is C14

The grid below represents a quantity of C14. Each time you click, one half-life goes by. Try it! C14 – blue N14 - red Half lives % C14 %N14 Ratio of C14 to N14 100% 0% no ratio 1 50% 1:1 After 1 half-life (5700 years), 50% of the C14 has decayed into N14. The ratio of C14 to N14 is 1:1. There are equal amounts of the 2 elements.

The grid below represents a quantity of C14. Each time you click, one half-life goes by. Try it! C14 – blue N14 - red Half lives % C14 %N14 Ratio of C14 to N14 100% 0% no ratio 1 50% 1:1 2 25% 75% 1:3 Now 2 half-lives have gone by for a total of 11,400 years. Half of the C14 that was present at the end of half-life #1 has now decayed to N14. Notice the C:N ratio. It will be useful later.

The grid below represents a quantity of C14. Each time you click, one half-life goes by. Try it! C14 – blue N14 - red Half lives % C14 %N14 Ratio of C14 to N14 100% 0% no ratio 1 50% 1:1 2 25% 75% 1:3 3 12.5% 87.5% 1:7 After 3 half-lives (17,100 years) only 12.5% of the original C14 remains. For each half-life period half of the material present decays. And again, notice the ratio, 1:7.

Try the next one on your own.............or So, how can this knowledge be used to determine the age of an ancient object such as a rock? To date a rock we use the uranium – lead method (U238 : Pb206). Here is our sample. Remember we have no idea how much U238 was in the rock originally but all we need is the U:Pb ratio in the rock today. This can be obtained by standard laboratory techniques. As you can see the U:Pb ratio is 1:1. From what we saw earlier a 1:1 ratio means that 1 half life has passed. Rock Sample Now all we have to do is see what the half-life for U238 is. We can find that information on page 1 of the Earth Science Reference Tables. 1 half-life = 4.5 x 109 years (4.5 billion), so the rock is 4.5 billion years old. Try the next one on your own.............or to review the previous frames click here.

Element X (Blue) decays into Element Y (red) The half life of element X is 2000 years. How old is our sample? See if this helps: 1 HL = 1:1 ratio 2 HL = 1:3 3 HL = 1:7 4 HL = 1:15 If you said that the sample was 8,000 years old, you understand radioactive dating. If you’re unsure and want an explanation just click.

Element X (blue) Element Y (red) How old is our sample? We know that the sample was originally 100% element X. There are three questions: First: What is the X:Y ratio now? Second: How many half-lives had to go by to reach this ratio? Third: How many years does this number of half-lives represent? 1) There is 1 blue square and 15 red squares. Count them. This is a 1:15 ratio. 2) As seen in the list on the previous slide, 4 half-lives must go by in order to reach a 1:15 ratio. 3) Since the half life of element X is 2,000 years, four half-lives would be 4 x 2,000 or 8,000 years. This is the age of the sample.

The half-life of this element is 1 million years. Regents question may involve graphs like this one. The most common Regents question is: "What is the half-life of this element?" Just remember that at the end of one half-life, 50% of the element will remain. Find 50% on the vertical axis, Follow the blue line over to the red curve and drop straight down to find the answer: The half-life of this element is 1 million years.

After 2 million years 25% of the original material will remain. Another common question is: "What percent of the material originally present will remain after 2 million years?" Find 2 million years on the bottom, horizontal axis. Then follow the green line up to the red curve. Go to the left and find the answer. After 2 million years 25% of the original material will remain.

radioactive substance Half of the radioactive substance breaks down during each half life. 25% 100% of the original radioactive substance 50% 12.5% 6.25% 3.125%

Lastly, when you see a radioactive decay question SUMMARY: Carbon 14 can only be used to date things that were once alive. This includes wood, articles of clothing made from animal skins, wool or cotton cloth, charcoal from an ancient hearth. But because the half-life of carbon 14 is relatively short the technique would be useless if the sample was extremely (millions of years) old. There would be too little C14 remaining to measure accurately. The other isotopes mentioned in the ES reference tables, K40, U238, and Rb87 are all used to date rocks. These elements have very long half-lives. The half-life of U238 for example is the same as the age of the Earth itself. That means that half the uranium originally present when the earth formed has now decayed. The half life of Rb87 is even longer. Lastly, when you see a radioactive decay question ask yourself these three questions: > What is the ratio? > How many half-lives went by to reach this ratio? > How many years do those half-lives represent?