Thursday, April 24, 2014

Carbon-14 dating assumes that the carbon dioxide on Earth today has the same radioactive content as it did centuries ago. If this is true, the...

It is impossible to predict when a particular atom will decay. However, it is equally likely to decay at any instant in time. Therefore, given a sample of a particular radioisotope, the number of decay events `−dN` expected to occur in a small interval of time `dt` is proportional to the number of atoms present `N,` i.e.


`-(dN)/(dt)propto N`


For different atoms different decay constants apply.


`-(dN)/(dt)=\lambda N`


The above differential equation is easily solved by separation of variables.


`N=N_0e^(-lambda t)`  


where `N_0` is the number of undecayed atoms at time `t=0.`


We can now calculate decay constant `lambda` for carbon-14 using the given half-life.


`N_0/2=N_0e^(-lambda 5715)`


`e^(-5715lambda)=1/2`


`-5715lambda=ln(1/2)`


`lambda=-(ln(1/2))/5715`


`lambda=1.21 times 10^-4`


Note that the above constant is usually measured in seconds rather than years.


Now we can return to the problem at hand. Since the charcoal contains only 15% (`0.15N_0` ) of the original carbon-14, we have


`0.15N_0=N_0e^(-1.21times10^-4t)`


Now we solve for `t.`


`e^(-1.21times10^-4t=0.15)`


`1.21times10^-4=-ln 0.15`


`t=-(ln0.15)/(1.21times10^-4)`


`t=15678.68`


According to our calculation the tree was burned approximately 15679 years ago.                                                                                                    

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