Regolith is sampled on mars and he concentration of potassium-40 is 120 ppm. In a crater, potassium-40 is only 12 ppm. If the half life of potassium-40 is 1.2 billion years, how long ago was this crater formed?
I do not understand how to get the answer.
I do not understand how to get the answer.
1 Answer
Explanation:
The half-life decay of some elements can be used to calculate how long a particular sample has been around, if the initial or baseline value is known. The "half-life" is the amount of time it takes for
Sometimes we can just do a serial division by two to get to the desired number. More accurately we have a specific equation that can do this for any value. I'll show the approximation first, then the equation.
Half-life decay approximation:
120ppm Start -> 1 half-life results in 60 ppm left (1.2B yr)
60ppm -> 1 half-life results in 30 ppm left (1.2B yr)
30ppm -> 1 half-life results in 15 ppm left (1.2B yr)
15ppm -> 1 half-life results in 7.5 ppm left (1.2B yr)
From this we can see that the sample is between 3.6 and 4.8 billion years, because 3-4 half-lifes were required.
The equation is:
A short-cut equation is :
Original Amount/Final Amount
k * Half-life = years to final amount