Half-Life 5centium Inv
Half-Life 5centium Inv
Half-Life 5centium Inv
Introduction:
You have probably heard the term "half-life" and know that it is related to the decay of radioactive elements.
Half-life is defined as; "The time required for half of any given amount of an unstable radioactive substance
(Parent Atoms) to decay into another, stable substance (Daughter Atoms)".
Radioactive decay is a constant process where an unstable radioactive element breaks down to become a
more stable element by releasing radioactive particles and radiation. In this investigation you will use 5 cent
coins to simulate how unstable atoms radioactively decay and how rocks of different ages have different
amounts of un-decayed (radioactive) and decayed (stable) elements.
Many elements exist in different forms. The atoms of the most stable forms have a balanced number of
protons, neutrons and electrons. Other forms, known as isotopes, usually have different numbers of
neutrons, and are unstable and radioactive, as they shed atomic particles in order to try to become stable.
The particles they lose come together to form the daughter atoms of a different element.
In radiometric dating, different isotopes of elements found in rocks are used to predict the age of the
igneous rocks. Potassium/Argon dating is good for rocks 100,000 years old since Potassium 40 has a half-
life of 1.3 billion years! Uranium/Lead dating is used for the most ancient rock, since U-238 has a half-life of
4.47 billion years.
By comparing the percentage of the original, un-decayed element (parent atom) to the percentage of the
new element (daughter atom), formed from the decay of the original isotope, the age of a rock can be
calculated. The ratio of the two atom types is directly related to their age because when the rock was
formed, it had all parent atoms and no daughter atoms.
Procedure:
You will be given a sample of a radioactive element known as 5centium, represented by 50, 5 cent coins.
Radioactive 5centium decays into a more stable element called 1centium (1 cent coins).
The total number of 5 cent coins and 1 cent coins in your cup must be the same as the number of 5
cent coins you started with (50). Atoms are never lost they just decay from the radioactive atoms (5 cent
coins) to more stable ones (flipped over coins).
4. Count and record the number of radioactive un-decayed 5centium atoms (face side up)
remaining. Record in the data table.
5. Repeat steps 2, 3 and 4 until all the coins have decayed into 1centium (flipped face side down) or
10 shakes of the cup-which ever happens first.
[4 marks]
Data Analysis:
Use the graph grid on the next page to plot your data of parent and daughter atoms over time passed
(millions of years).
[6 marks]
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4. What is the half-life of 5centium? (i.e., What number of shakes are necessary to reduce the
radioactive members to one-half?)
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5. If you started with 100, 5 cent coins, would the half-life change? Explain your answer.
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6. Suppose you had 20 radioactive 5 cent coins. Using your graph to determine how many years had
passed.
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7. After 2,000 million years had passed how many radioactive 5 cent coins would be left?
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8. Looking at the table (below) of elements used in radioactive dating, identify which element the
radioactive 5 cent coins represent.
Answer ..................................................................................................................................................
9. Can this radioactive element be used to determine the age of humanoid fossils? Why or why not?
(Remember from the timeline, humanoids first appeared 5 million years ago).
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[10 marks]
5. The half-life will not change. One can start with "any given amount".
6.
8. U-235
10. Yes, a small amount of the parent atom will remain. This concept is successive halves. No matter how
far you multiply, a fraction of the whole will remain. In the case of C-14, eventually only a single atom will
remain.