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RADIOACTIVE DECAY:
Ever heard of Plutonium? It's
the stuff we use in our nuclear things -- weapons, submarines, etc.
Plutonium-239 has a half-life of
24,110 years.
"Half-life
means that, if you have 100
pounds of Plutonium-239...
In
24,110 years, you'd still have
50
pounds left...
In another
24,110 years, you'd still have
25
pounds left.
This stuff just won't go away! This is why
it is such a big concern when a nuclear submarine sinks...
Eventually, the salt water will eat through the steel and release
the Plutonium (which, as you know, is quite lethal.) They
usually talk about either trying to raise the sub or encase it in
concrete where it rests. The last figure I heard was
that there are currently eight nuclear subs on our ocean floors.
Now that I've completely depressed you... back to the math!
Hey, did you know that YOU are
radioactive? You've got this stuff in you called Carbon-14...
It comes from cosmic rays that rain down on the earth (and us) from
outer space. (By the way, you are mostly Carbon-12, which is
not radioactive. That's why we are called "Carbon-based life
forms." Man, I've really watched too much Star Trek.)
Scientists use Carbon-14 to make a
guess at how old some things are -- things that used to be alive
like people, animals, wood and natural cloths. It doesn't work
for sea creatures and other things that are under water. Think
about it... Cosmic rays can't get through the water.
Anyway, they make an estimate of
how much Carbon-14 would have been in the thing when it died...
Then they measure how much is left in the specimen when they find
it. This is where the half-life comes in... the
half-life of Carbon-14 is about
5730 years.
Here's one of the formulas they
use:

If we mess with this a bit, we can
make it simpler:

You can use either of these
formulas. I'm going to use the second one since it's easier
and it's used more often.
Continued on the
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