The half-life of a quantity subject to exponential decay is the time required for the quantity to decay to half of its initial value. The concept originated in the study of radioactive decay, but applies to many other fields as well, including phenomena which are described by non-exponential decays.
| Number of half-lives elapsed | Fraction remaining | As power of 2 |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1/1 | |
| 1 | 1/2 | |
| 2 | 1/4 | |
| 3 | 1/8 | |
| 4 | 1/16 | |
| 5 | 1/32 | |
| 6 | 1/64 | |
| 7 | 1/128 | |
| ... | ... | |
| N |
It can be shown that, for exponential decay, the half-life obeys this relation:
The half-life is related to the mean lifetime τ by the following relation:
The generalized constant λ can represent many different specific physical quantities, depending on what process is being described.
or, in terms of the two half-lives
where is the half-life of the first process, and is the half life of the second process.
where is the initial value of N (at t = 0)
When t = 0, the exponential is equal to 1, and N(t) is equal to . As t approaches infinity, the exponential approaches zero. In particular, there is a time such that
Substituting into the formula above, we have
Most appropriate to validate the concept of half-life for radioactive decay, in particular when dealing with a small number of atoms, is to perform experiments and correct computer simulations. See in * how to test the behavior of the last atoms. Validation of physics-math models consists in comparing the model's behavior with experimental observations of real physical systems or valid simulations (physical and/or computer). The references given here describe how to test the validity of the exponential formula for small number of atoms with simple simulations, experiments, and computer code.
In radioactive decay, the exponential model does not apply for a small number of atoms (or a small number of atoms is not within the domain of validity of the formula or equation or table). The DIY experiments use pennies or m&m candies. *." target="_blank" >See how to write a computer program that simulates radioactive decay including the required randomness in [http://astro.gmu.edu/classes/c80196/hw2.html and experience the behavior of the last atoms. Of particular note, atoms undergo radioactive decay in whole units, and so after enough half-lives the remaining original quantity becomes an actual zero rather than asymptotically approaching zero as with continuous systems.
Radioactivity | Exponentials | chemical kinetics
Halfleeftyd | عمر النصف | Període de semidesintegració | Poločas rozpadu | Halveringstid | Halbwertszeit | Poolestusaeg | Vida media y Vida mitad | Duoniĝtempo | Semidesintegrazio-periodo | Demi-vie | 반감기 | Waktu paruh | Helmingunartími | Emivita | מחצית חיים | Felezési idő | Halfwaardetijd | 半減期 | Halveringstid | Halveringstid | Czas połowicznego rozpadu | Meia-vida | Период полураспада | Време полураспада | Puoliintumisaika | Halveringstid | அரைவாழ்வுக் காலம் | ครึ่งชีวิต | Yarılanma süresi | 半衰期
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It uses material from the
"Half-life".
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