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SAL: In the last video we saw all sorts of different types
of isotopes of atoms experiencing radioactive decay
and turning into other atoms or releasing different types
of particles.
But the question is, when does an atom or
nucleus decide to decay?
Let's say I have a bunch of, let's say these are all atoms.
I have a bunch of atoms here.
And let's say we're talking about the type of decay where
an atom turns into another atom.
So your proton number is going to change.
Your atomic number is going to change.
So it could either be beta decay, which would release
electrons from the neutrons and turn them into protons.
Or maybe positron emission turning protons into neutrons.
But that's not what's relevant here.
Let's say we have a collection of atoms. And normally when we
have any small amount of any element, we really have huge
amounts of atoms of that element.
And we've talked about moles and, you know, one gram of
carbon-12-- I'm sorry, 12 grams-- 12 grams of carbon-12
has one mole of carbon-12 in it.
One mole of carbon-12.
And what is one mole of carbon-12?
That's 6.02 times 10 to the 23rd carbon-12 atoms. This is
a ginormous number.
This is more than we can, than my head can really grasp
around how large of a number this is.
And this is only when we have 12 grams. 12 grams is not a
large mass.
For example, one kilogram is about two pounds.
So this is about, what?
I want to say [? 1/50 ?]
of a pound if I'm doing [? it. ?]
But this is not a lot of mass right here.
And pounds is obviously force.
You get the idea.
On Earth, well anywhere, mass is invariant.
This is not a tremendous amount.
So with that said, let's go back to the question of how do
we know if one of these guys are going to
decay in some way.
And maybe not carbon-12, maybe we're talking about carbon-14
or something.
How do we know that they're going to decay?
And the answer is, you don't.
They all have some probability of the decaying.
At any given moment, for a certain type of element or a
certain type of isotope of an element, there's some
probability that one of them will decay.
That, you know, maybe this guy will decay this second.
And then nothing happens for a long time, a long time, and
all of a sudden two more guys decay.
And so, like everything in chemistry, and a lot of what
we're starting to deal with in physics and quantum mechanics,
everything is probabilistic.
I mean, maybe if we really got in detail on the
configurations of the nucleus, maybe we could get a little
bit better in terms of our probabilities, but we don't
know what's going on inside of the nucleus, so all we can do
is ascribe some probabilities to something reacting.
Now you could say, OK, what's the probability of any given
molecule reacting in one second?
Or you could define it that way.
But we're used to dealing with things on the macro level, on
dealing with, you know, huge amounts of atoms. So what we
do is we come up with terms that help us get our head
around this.
And one of those terms is the term half-life.
And let me erase this stuff down here.
So I have a description, and we're going to hopefully get
an intuition of what half-life means.
So I wrote a decay reaction right here,
where you have carbon-14.
It decays into nitrogen-14.
And we could just do a little bit of review.
You go from six protons to seven protons.
Your mass changes the same.
So one of the neutrons must have turned into a proton and
that is what happened.
And it does that by releasing an electron, which is also
call a beta particle.
We could have written this as minus 1 charge.
Relatively zero mass.
It does have some mass, but they write zero.
This is kind of notation.
So this is beta decay.
Beta decay, this is just a review.
But the way we think about half-life is, people have
studied carbon and they said, look, if I start off with 10
grams-- if I have just a block of carbon that's 10 grams. If
I wait carbon-14's half-life-- this is a
specific isotope of carbon.
Remember, isotopes, if there's carbon, can come in 12, with
an atomic mass number of 12, or with 14, or I mean, there's
different isotopes of different elements.
And the atomic number defines the carbon,
because it has six protons.
Carbon-12 has six protons.
Carbon-14 has six protons.
But they have a different number of neutrons.
So when you have the same element with varying number of
neutrons, that's an isotope.
So the carbon-14 version, or this isotope of carbon, let's
say we start with 10 grams. If they say that it's half-life
is 5,740 years, that means that if on day one we start
off with 10 grams of pure carbon-14, after 5,740 years,
half of this will have turned into
nitrogen-14, by beta decay.
And you might say, oh OK, so maybe-- let's see, let me make
nitrogen magenta, right there-- so you might say, OK,
maybe that half turns into nitrogen.
And I've actually seen this drawn this way in some
chemistry classes or physics classes, and my immediate
question is how does this half know that it
must turn into nitrogen?
And how does this half know that it must stay as carbon?
And the answer is they don't know.
And it really shouldn't be drawn this way.
So let me redraw it.
So this is our original block of our carbon-14.
What happens over that 5,740 years is that,
probabilistically, some of these guys just start turning
into nitrogen randomly, at random points.
And over 5,740 years, you determine that there's a 50%
chance that any one of these carbon atoms will turn into a
nitrogen atom.
So that after 5,740 years, the half-life of carbon, a 50%
chance that any of the guys that are carbon
will turn to nitrogen.
So if you go back after a half-life, half of the atoms
will now be nitrogen.
So now you have, after one half-life-- So
let's ignore this.
So we started with this.
All 10 grams were carbon.
10 grams of c-14.
This is after one half-life.
And now we have five grams of c-14.
And we have five grams of nitrogen-14.
Fair enough.
Let's think about what happens after another half-life.
Well we said that during a half-life, 5,740 years in the
case of carbon-14-- all different elements have a
different half-life, if they're radioactive-- over
5,740 years there's a 50%-- and if I just look at any one
atom-- there's a 50% chance it'll decay.
So if we go to another half-life, if we go another
half-life from there, I had five grams of carbon-14.
So let me actually copy and paste this one.
This is what I started with.
Now after another half-life-- you can ignore all my little,
actually let me erase some of this up here.
Let me clean it up a little bit.
After one one half-life, what happens?
Well I now am left with five grams of carbon-14.
Those five grams of carbon-14, every one of those atoms still
has, over the next-- whatever that number was, 5,740 years--
after 5,740 years, all of those once
again have a 50% chance.
And by the law of large numbers, half of them will
have converted into nitrogen-14.
So we'll have even more conversion into nitrogen-14.
So now half of that five grams. So now we're only left
with 2.5 grams of c-14.
And how much nitrogen-14?
Well we have another two and a half went to nitrogen.
So now we have seven and a half grams of nitrogen-14.
And we could keep going further into the future, and
after every half-life, 5,740 years, we will have half of
the carbon that we started.
But we'll always have an
infinitesimal amount of carbon.
But let me ask you a question.
Let's say I'm just staring at one carbon atom.
Let's say I just have this one carbon atom.
You know, I've got its nucleus, with its c-14.
So it's got its six protons.
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.
It's got its eight neutrons.
It's got its six electrons.
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, whatever.
What's going to happen?
What's going to happen after one second?
Well, I don't know.
It'll probably still be carbon, but there's some
probability that after one second it will have already
turned into nitrogen-14.
What's going to happen after one billion years?
Well, after one billion years I'll say, well you know, it'll
probably have turned into nitrogen-14 at that point, but
I'm not sure.
This might be the one ultra-stable nucleus that just
happened to, kind of, go against the
odds and stay carbon-14.
So after one half-life, if you're just looking at one
atom after 5,740 years, you don't know whether this turned
into a nitrogen or not.
This exact atom, you just know that it had a 50% chance of
turning into a nitrogen.
Now, if you look at it over a huge number of atoms. I mean,
if you start approaching, you know, Avogadro's number or
anything larger-- I erased that.
Then all of a sudden you can use the law of large numbers
and say, OK, on average, if each of those atoms must have
had a 50% chance, and if I have gazillions of them, half
of them will have turned into nitrogen.
I don't know which half, but half of them
will turn into it.
So you might get a question like, I start with, oh I don't
know, let's say I start with 80 grams of something with,
let's just call it x, and it has a half-life of two years.
I'm just making up this compound.
A two-year half-life.
And then let's say we go into a time machine and we look
back at our sample, and let's say we only have 10 grams of
our sample left.
And we want to know how much time has passed by.
So 10 grams left of x.
How much time, you know, x is decaying the whole time, how
much time has passed?
Well let's think about it.
We're starting at time, 0 with 80 grams. After two years, how
much are we going to have left?
We're going to have 40 grams. So t equals 2.
But after two more years, how many are we going to have?
We're going to have 20 grams. So this is t equals 3 I'm
sorry, this is t equals 4 years.
And then after two more years, I'll only have half of that
left again.
So now I'm only going to have 10 grams left.
And that's where I am.
And this is t equals 6.
So if you know you have some compound.
You're starting off with 80 grams. You know it has a
two-year half-life.
You get in a time machine.
And then you didn't build your time machine well.
You don't know how well it calibrates against time.
You just look at your sample.
You say, oh, I only have 10 grams left.
You know that 1, 2, 3 half-lives have gone by.
And you could also think about it this way.
1/2 to the 3rd power, because every time you have 1/2 of the
original sample-- that's the number of half-lives-- after
three half-lives you'll have 1/8 of your original sample.
And that's what we have here.
We have 1/8 of 80 grams. And this is just when you're doing
it with a discreet you know, when you're right at the
half-life point.
In the next video we're going to explore what if I asked you
a question, how many of the particles, or how many grams
will you have in exactly 10 days?
Or at two and a half years?
And we'll do that in the next video.