Half-Life
Overview
Half-Life describes how radioactive substances decrease with time. It is a statistical measure of radioactive decay and one of the most important tools for solving nuclear-decay problems.
This topic connects directly with:
Core Ideas
- half-life is the time for an undecayed quantity to fall to half its value
- individual nuclei decay randomly, but large samples behave predictably
- decay constant measures the probability of decay per unit time
- undecayed nuclei, activity, and corrected count rate all decay exponentially with the same half-life
- background count must be subtracted before using count-rate data for half-life analysis
Connection to Radioactive Decay
Radioactive nuclei decay:
- spontaneously
- randomly
- independently of one another
Although individual nuclei decay unpredictably, a large sample behaves in a predictable way.
That predictable decrease gives rise to the idea of half-life.
Definition of Half-Life
The half-life of a radioactive nuclide is the time taken for:
- the number of undecayed nuclei to fall to half its original value
or equivalently:
- activity to fall to half its original value
- corrected count rate to fall to half its original value
Symbol:
Random Decay and Statistical Predictability
Individual Nucleus
It is impossible to know exactly when one nucleus will decay.
Large Sample
For many nuclei:
- average behaviour is highly predictable
- the sample follows the exponential decay law
This is why half-life is meaningful and measurable.
Decay Constant Overview
The decay constant is:
It represents the probability per unit time that a nucleus decays.
Unit:
Larger means:
- faster decay
- shorter half-life
Half-Life Relation
Therefore:
- large gives small half-life
- small gives long half-life
Decay Law Overview
Number of Undecayed Nuclei
where:
- = initial number
- = number remaining after time
Activity
Since activity is proportional to the number of undecayed nuclei:
and:
Count Rate
If detector geometry remains constant, the corrected source count rate follows:
where:
- = initial corrected source count rate
- = corrected source count rate at time
Repeated Halving Method
After each half-life, the quantity halves.
| Time | Remaining Fraction |
|---|---|
This is useful when the time is an exact multiple of the half-life.
Activity, Count Rate and Nuclei Linkage
These three quantities are proportional:
- undecayed nuclei
- activity
- corrected count rate
So they all fall with the same half-life.
If halves:
- halves
- corrected halves
Background Count Overview
A detector often records background radiation.
Measured count rate:
Therefore:
Always subtract background before using count-rate data to determine half-life.
Graph Overview
Decay graphs of:
- against
- against
- against
are exponential curves:
- steep at first
- flatten gradually
- never reach zero exactly
See Exponential Decay and Graphs.
Short Worked Examples
Example 1: Repeated Halving
Half-life = 5 h
Initial activity = 800 Bq
After 15 h:
- 3 half-lives
Answer:
Example 2: Find Half-Life
A sample drops from 1200 Bq to 300 Bq in 8 h.
So there are two half-lives in 8 h.
Therefore:
Example 3: Background Count
Measured count rate = 90 counts min
Background count rate = 15 counts min
Corrected source count rate:
Use 75 for decay calculations.
Exam Relevance
Students should be able to:
- define half-life correctly for undecayed nuclei, activity, and corrected count rate
- distinguish random single-nucleus behaviour from predictable large-sample behaviour
- use repeated halving for simple calculations
- use exponential-decay relations and the half-life formula
- correct count-rate data for background before analysing graphs
Formula Sheet
Decay Law
Activity
Activity Decay
Count Rate Decay
Half-Life Relation
Common Exam Traps Overview
Students often confuse:
- half-life with complete disappearance
- random single decay with predictable sample decay
- activity with the number decayed
- measured count rate with corrected count rate
- repeated-halving steps
- the units and meaning of
See Half-Life Common Exam Traps.
Quick Revision Summary
- half-life is the time for a quantity to halve
- it applies to , , and corrected
- radioactive decay is random for one nucleus but predictable for many
- decay follows the exponential law
- larger decay constant means shorter half-life
- subtract background count before analysis