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Key vocab: What is a Radioactive Isotope? What is Radioactive Decay? What is Half Life?

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Presentation on theme: "Key vocab: What is a Radioactive Isotope? What is Radioactive Decay? What is Half Life?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Key vocab: What is a Radioactive Isotope? What is Radioactive Decay? What is Half Life?

2 Radioactive elements are unstable. They decay, and change into different elements over time. Not all elements are radioactive. Those that are and are the most useful for geologic dating are: U-238(Uranium) Half-life = 4.5 Billion Years K-40 (Potassium) Half-life = 1.25 Billion Years C-14(Carbon) Half-life = 5, 730 Years Radioactive Isotopes

3 Radioactive Decay and Half Life Here are some facts to remember: 1.The half-life of an element is the time it takes for half of the material you started with to decay. 2. Each element has its own half-life

4 3. Each element decays into a new element C 14 decays into N 14 (Nitrogen) while U 238 decays into Pb 206 (Lead), etc. 4. The half-life of each element is constant. It’s like a clock keeping perfect time. Now let’s see how we can use half-life to determine the age of a rock or other artifact. Radioactive Decay and Half Life

5 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 N 14 - red As we begin notice that no time has gone by and that 100% of the material is C 14 Half lives % C 14 %N 14 Ratio of C 14 to N 14 0100%0%no ratio

6 The grid below represents a quantity of C 14. Each time you click, one half-life goes by and you see red. C 14 – blue N 14 - red Half lives % C 14 %N 14 Ratio of C 14 to N 14 0100%0%no ratio 150% 1:1 After 1 half-life (5730 years), 50% of the C 14 has decayed into N 14. The ratio of C 14 to N 14 is 1:1. There are equal amounts of the 2 elements.

7 The blue grid below represents a quantity of C 14. Each time you click, one half-life goes by and you see red. C 14 – blue N 14 - red Half lives % C 14 %N 14 Ratio of C 14 to N 14 0100%0%no ratio 150% 1:1 225%75%1:3 Now 2 half-lives have gone by for a total of 11,460 years. Half of the C 14 that was present at the end of half-life #1 has now decayed to N 14. Notice the C:N ratio. It will be useful later.

8 The blue grid below represents a quantity of C 14. Each time you click, one half-life goes by and you see red. C 14 – blue N 14 - red Half lives % C 14 %N 14 Ratio of C 14 to N 14 0100%0%no ratio 150% 1:1 225%75%1:3 312.5%87.5%1:7 After 3 half-lives (17,190 years) only 12.5% of the original C 14 remains. For each half-life period half of the material present decays. And again, notice the ratio, 1:7

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10 What is the half life represented in this graph?

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