A parchment fragment was discovered that had about 74% as much Carbon 14 radioactivity as does plant material on the earth today. How would you estimate the age of the parchment?
The half life of carbon-14 is about 5730 years.
The half life of carbon-14 is about 5730 years.
1 Answer
Explanation:
It's important that you don't let the wording of the problem confuse you.
The part about
"74% as much carbon-14 as does plant material on the Earth today"
is equivalent to
"of the initial amount of carbon-14 present in the parchment, only 74% remains undecayed"
Now, a radioactive isotope's nuclear half-life is defined as the time needed to an initial sample of this isotope to be reduced to half of its initial value.
Simply put, any amount of carbon-14 you start with will be halved with the passing of each half-life. Mathematically, you can write this as
#color(blue)(A = A_0 * 1/2^n)" "# , where
In your case, you know that
#A = 74/100 * A_0#
The above equation becomes
#74/100 color(red)(cancel(color(black)(A_0))) = color(red)(cancel(color(black)(A_0))) * 1/2^n#
Solve this equation for
#ln(74/100) = ln( (1/2)^n)#
#ln(74/100) = n * ln(1/2)#
#n = ln(74/100)/ln(1/2) = 0.434403#
Since
#color(blue)(n = "period of time"/"half-life")#
you can say that
#n = t/t_"1/2" implies t = n * t_"1/2"#
Therefore
#t = 0.434403 * "5730 years" = color(green)("2490 years")#
I'll leave the answer rounded to three sig figs.