Half-Life Calculator

Calculate half-life parameters and exponential decay constants

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Half-Life Calculator

The following tools can generate any one of the values from the other three in the half-life formula for a substance undergoing decay to decrease by half. Half-life is the time required for half of something to undergo a process, commonly used in radioactive decay calculations.

๐Ÿ“Š Half-Life Calculator

Please provide any three of the following to calculate the fourth value:

๐Ÿ“Š Result

Using the provided values, the calculated result will appear here.

Formula Used:

Nt = N0 ร— (1/2)t/t1/2
Where Nt is remaining quantity, N0 is initial quantity, t is time elapsed, and t1/2 is half-life.

๐Ÿ”„ Half-Life, Mean Lifetime, and Decay Constant Conversion

Please provide any one of the following to get the other two:

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Conversion Results

Enter any one parameter above to calculate the other two values.
Half-Life (tโ‚/โ‚‚): -
Mean Lifetime (ฯ„): -
Decay Constant (ฮป): -

๐Ÿ“š Definition and Formula

What is Half-Life?

Half-life is defined as the amount of time it takes a given quantity to decrease to half of its initial value. The term is most commonly used in relation to atoms undergoing radioactive decay, but can be used to describe other types of decay, whether exponential or not. One of the most well-known applications of half-life is carbon-14 dating.

The half-life of carbon-14 is approximately 5,730 years, and it can be reliably used to measure dates up to around 50,000 years ago. The process of carbon-14 dating was developed by William Libby, and is based on the fact that carbon-14 is constantly being made in the atmosphere. It is incorporated into plants through photosynthesis, and then into animals when they consume plants. The carbon-14 undergoes radioactive decay once the plant or animal dies, and measuring the amount of carbon-14 in a sample conveys information about when the plant or animal died.

Exponential Decay Formulas

Below are shown three equivalent formulas describing exponential decay:

Nt = N0 ร— (1/2)t/tโ‚/โ‚‚

Nt = N0 ร— e-t/ฯ„

Nt = N0 ร— e-ฮปt

Where:

  • Nโ‚€ is the initial quantity
  • Nโ‚œ is the remaining quantity after time, t
  • tโ‚/โ‚‚ is the half-life
  • ฯ„ is the mean lifetime
  • ฮป is the decay constant

Example Calculation

If an archaeologist found a fossil sample that contained 25% carbon-14 in comparison to a living sample, the time of the fossil sample's death could be determined by rearranging the equation, since Nโ‚œ, Nโ‚€, and tโ‚/โ‚‚ are known:

t = tโ‚/โ‚‚ ร— log(Nโ‚œ/Nโ‚€) / log(1/2)

t = 5,730 ร— log(0.25/1.0) / log(0.5)

t = 5,730 ร— (-1.386) / (-0.693) = 11,460 years

This means that the fossil is 11,460 years old.

Relationship Between Half-Life Constants

Using the above equations, it is also possible for a relationship to be derived between tโ‚/โ‚‚, ฯ„, and ฮป. This relationship enables the determination of all values, as long as at least one is known.

tโ‚/โ‚‚ = ฯ„ ร— ln(2) = ln(2) / ฮป

ฯ„ = tโ‚/โ‚‚ / ln(2) = 1 / ฮป

ฮป = ln(2) / tโ‚/โ‚‚ = 1 / ฯ„