Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGregory Goodwin Modified over 9 years ago
1
Foundations of a modern approach to measuring geological age ~1900: Becquerel & Curie discover radioactivity in U, Pu, Ra and ‘ionium’ (Th) Rutherford proposes 3 types of radioactivity: emits mass but no charge ( 4 He nucleus) emits charge but no (observable) mass (electron or positron) emission has neither charge nor mass (high-frequency radiation) Rutherford notes/postulates two key properties of radioactivity: Reactions are exothermic Emission is independent of properties or environment of elements
2
If rate of emission is invariant w/ time or setting, then radiation can serve as a clock: - dN/dt = N Constant of proportionality; now called ‘decay constant’ 1/ = ‘mean life ln 2/ = ‘half life’ (a miracle of integration occurs) N = N 0 e - t For and radiation, nothing lasting is produced (at least, nothing detectable by 1900-era scientists). But particles accumulate in a measurable way: Define ‘D’ as number of ‘daughter’ particles D = D 0 + D* D* = N 0 - N D = N 0 (1-e - t ) + D 0 = N (e t -1) + D 0
4
Re-arrange decay equation to make time the dependant variable: ln {[ (D-D 0 ) N ] +1 } t = Pick mineral with no structural He; D 0 = 0 Radiation counting in lab Pick mineral w/ stoichiometric Parent element (e.g., UO 2 ), so N depends only on mass With correct choice of sample, t depends only on D - the amount of He trapped in the mineral lattice
5
Rutherford’s chronometer Pitchblende, or U ore, rich in UO 2 U ~ 1.5x10 -10 U 8 Time (yrs) moles Hecc STP 10005x10 -9 1x10 -4 1 million5x10 -6 0.1 10 million5x10 -5 1.0 1 billion5x10 -3 100 1 gram of UO 2 Found African pitchblende is ca. 500 million years old Problems: Sensitivity and precision of manometric measurements Reaction is not fully described. U weighs ca. 238 g/mol; 8 He nuclei only 32 g/mol. Where is the rest of the mass! He is not well retained by crystals
6
Breakthrough: Aston’s positive ray device
7
Ions are passed through a magnetic field oriented orthogonal To their direction of motion. Ions are deflected with a radius of curvature set by the force balance between the magnetic field (qv x B) and the centripital force (mv 2 /r). That is, r = mv/(qB) If energy is of all ions is equal, this acts as a mass filter. High momentum (high mass) Low momentum (low mass))
8
Intensity Strength of B field
9
Finnigan Triton A modern thermal ionization mass spectrometer Ion source Collectors (faraday cups and/or electron multipliers) Momentum analyzer (electro magnet)
10
Advances stemming from mass spectrometry Precision improves from ca. ±1 % to ca. ±10 -5 Recognition of isotopes permits the definition of decay reactions Z protons + N neutrons = A mass decay: Z + N (Z-2) + (N-2) + 4 He + + Q e.g., 238 U 234 Th + 4 He; = 1.55x10 -10 147 Sm 143 Nd + 4 He; = 6.5x10 -12 yr -1 decay: Z + N (Z+1) + (N-1) + e - + + Q e.g., 87 Rb 87 Sr + e - ; = 1.42x10 -11 yr -1 decay: Z + N (Z-1) + (N+1) + e + + + Q e.g., 18 F 18 O + e + ; = 3.3x10 3 yr -1 Most geological ‘chronometers’ depend on and decay e.g., 14 C 14 N + e - ; = 1.2x10 -4 yr -1
12
Mass spectrometry is best at measuring relative abundances of isotopes. This motivates an additional change to age-dating equations: D = Daughter ( 4 He; 87 Sr; 143 Nd) N = Parent ( 238 U; 87 Rb; 147 Sm) S = Stable ( 3 He; 86 Sr; 144 Nd) The ‘stable’ nuclide is always a non-radioactive, non-radiogeneic isotope of the same element as the ‘Daughter’ nuclide. D = N (e t - 1) + D 0 D/S = N/S (e t - 1) + D 0 /S This is the equation for a line in the ‘isochron’ plot Y-axis value X-axis value Y-intercept Slope
13
D/S N/S D 0 /S m = e t - 1 Measured composition of object Three strategies for use: Measured objects known to have D 0 /S ~ 0 Assume or infer D 0 /S from independent constraint Define slope from two or more related objects, yielding both age (t) and D 0 /S as dependent variables. These objects must be of same age, have started life with identical D 0 /S, but differ significantly in N/S The anatomy of the isochron diagram
14
A common example: the Rb-Sr chronometer applied to granite Isotopes of Sr: 84 Sr: 0.56 % 86 Sr: 9.87 % 87 Sr: 7.04 % 88 Sr: 82.53 % (all values approximate) Sr: typically a +2 cation; 1.13 Å ionic radius (like Ca: +2, 0.99 Å) Isotopes of Rb: 85 Rb: Stable 87 Rb: Radioactive: l = 1.42x10 -11 yr -1 ; - decay 85 Rb/ 87 Rb in all substances from earth and moon assumed = 2.59265 Rb: typically a +1 cation; 1.48 Å ionic radius (like K; +1, 1.33 Å)
15
Isotopes of Nd: 142 Nd: 27.1 % 143 Nd: 12.2 % 144 Nd: 23.9 % 145 Nd: 8.3 % 146 Nd: 17.2 % ( 147 Nd: 10.99 d half life) 148 Nd: 5.7 % 150 Nd 5.6 % (all values approximate) Isotopes of Sm: 144 Sm: 3.1 % (146 Sm: 10 8 yr half life) 147 Sm: 15.0 % (1.06x10 11 yr half life) 148 Sm: 11.2 % 149 Sm: 13.8 % 150 Sm: 7.4 % (151 Sm: 93 year half life) 152 Sm 26.7 % 154 Sm: 22.8 % (all values approximate) The Sm-Nd chronometer
16
The ‘rare earth’ elements Normalized abundance Plagioclase Pyroxene Garnet
17
A fragment of the chondritic meteorite, Allende
18
A thin section of the chondritic meteorite, Allende
21
"There is one independent check on the age of the solar system determined by radioactivity in meteorites. Detailed theoretical studies of the structure of the sun, using its known mass and reasonable assumptions about its composition, indicates that it has taken the sun about five billion years to attain its present observed radius and luminosity.” W. Fowler Comparison with a modern ‘Kelvinistic’ argument: Summary of typical stellar lifetimes, sizes and luminosities
22
14 C decay: The basis of most ages for geologically young things 14 C is produced in the atmosphere: 14 N + n = 14 C + p Cosmic-ray fast neutrons Undergoes beta-decay with a half-life of 5730 yrs: 14 C = 14 N + e - = 1.209x10 -4 yr -1 Age (yrs) = 19,035 x log (C/C 0 ) [ or …’x log ( Activity / Activity0 )’] Key for application is assumption of a value of C 0, which depends on 14 C/ 12 C ratio in atmosphere Real applications require correction for natural isotopic fractionation (e.g., during photosynthesis) and must consider variations in production rate with time and isotopic heterogeneity of surface carbon pools
23
The ‘bomb spike’ Natural heterogeneity: 14 C ‘ages’ of deep ocean water
24
Variation in atmospheric 14 C/ 12 C through time due to natural processes ∆ 14 C = (R i /R 0 -1)x1000 Where R i = 14 C/ 12 C at time of interest R 0 = 14 C/ 12 C of pre-1890 wood projected forward to 1950 (?!?&*!)
25
Using 14 C to reconstruct earthquake recurrence intervals
26
The U-Pb system and the age of the Earth 238 U = 206 Pb + 8x 4 He = 1.55125x10 -10 (4.5 Ga half life) 235 U = 207 Pb + 7x 4 He = 9.8485x10 -10 (0.7 Ga half life) 204 Pb is a stable isotope 238 U/ 235 U is (nearly) constant in nature = 137.88 206 Pb 204 Pb 207 Pb 204 Pb 207 Pb 0 204 Pb 206 Pb 0 204 Pb 238 U 204 Pb 235 U 204 Pb (e t - 1) (e t - 1) =+ =+ 207 Pb 204 Pb 207 Pb 0 204 Pb 206 Pb 204 Pb 206 Pb 0 204 Pb - - = 1 137.88 (e t - 1) (e t - 1)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.