Half-Life Calculator - Radioactive & Exponential Decay

Calculate Remaining Amount

N(t) = N₀ × (1/2)^(t/t₁/₂)

Half-Life Calculator — quick guide

1) Core idea

Compute how much remains after time t, solve for half-life, or find the time to reach a target amount using exponential decay.

2) How this tool works

  • Remaining amount: N(t) = N0 × (1/2)^(t / t1/2).
  • Find half-life: t1/2 = t × ln(2) / ln(N0 / N).
  • Find time: t = t1/2 × log2(N0 / N).
  • Unit handling: converts years/days/hours/minutes/seconds (1 year = 31,557,600 s).

3) Sanity checks

  • t = 0 → N(t) = N0.
  • t = t1/2 → N(t) = N0/2.
  • As t increases, N(t) never reaches exactly 0 (asymptotic).

4) Shortcuts that help

  • log2(x) = ln(x)/ln(2) if your calculator only has ln.
  • n half-lives → remaining fraction = (1/2)^n.
  • 10 half-lives ≈ 0.1% remaining.

5) Common pitfalls

  • Mismatched units between t and t1/2.
  • Using N ≥ N0 when solving for half-life or time.
  • Hex Calculator

6) Micro-examples

  • C-14: N0=100, t1/2=5730 y, t=11,460 y → N=25.
  • Find t1/2: N0=100 → N=50 in t=5730 y → t1/2=5730 y.
  • Find t: N0=100 → N=12.5 with t1/2=5730 y → t=17,190 y.

7) Mini-FAQ

  • Decay constant? λ = ln(2)/t1/2 (per time unit).
  • Can amount increase? Not in a pure decay model.
  • Units? Enter any supported unit; the tool converts internally.

8) Action tip

Normalize units first (pick your time unit, then enter values). For quick checks, count half-lives rather than crunch logs.

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Understanding Half-Life and Radioactive Decay

A half-life calculator is an essential tool for understanding radioactive decay, exponential decay processes, and time-dependent phenomena in physics, chemistry, and biology. Half-life represents the time required for half of a substance to decay or transform.

What is Half-Life?

Half-life (t₁/₂) is the time required for exactly half of a given amount of a radioactive substance to decay. This concept applies to:

Mathematical Foundations

Exponential Decay Formula

The fundamental equation for exponential decay is:

N(t) = N₀ × e^(-λt)

Where:

Half-Life Formula

Using the half-life concept:

N(t) = N₀ × (1/2)^(t/t₁/₂)

This is equivalent to the exponential form where λ = ln(2)/t₁/₂

Relationship Between Formulas

The decay constant and half-life are related by:

λ = ln(2)/t₁/₂ ≈ 0.693/t₁/₂

Types of Radioactive Decay

Alpha Decay

Emission of alpha particles (helium nuclei):

Beta Decay

Emission of beta particles (electrons or positrons):

Gamma Decay

Emission of gamma rays (electromagnetic radiation):

Practical Applications

Carbon Dating

Carbon-14 dating uses radioactive decay to determine ages:

Medical Applications

Radioactive isotopes in medicine:

Nuclear Power

Half-life considerations in nuclear energy:

Geological Dating Methods

Uranium-Lead Dating

For very old rocks and minerals:

Potassium-Argon Dating

For volcanic rocks and minerals:

Non-Radioactive Applications

Pharmacokinetics

Drug elimination from the body:

Environmental Science

Pollutant degradation and persistence:

Calculation Examples

Example 1: Remaining Amount

Given: 100g of C-14, half-life = 5,730 years, time = 11,460 years

Solution: N(t) = 100 × (1/2)^(11,460/5,730) = 100 × (1/2)² = 25g

Example 2: Finding Half-Life

Given: 100g → 50g in 5,730 years

Solution: t₁/₂ = 5,730 × ln(2)/ln(100/50) = 5,730 years

Example 3: Time to Decay

Given: 100g → 12.5g, half-life = 5,730 years

Solution: t = 5,730 × log₂(100/12.5) = 5,730 × 3 = 17,190 years

Advanced Concepts

Decay Chains

Series of consecutive decays:

Branching Ratios

When multiple decay paths exist:

Safety and Radiation Protection

Exposure Limits

Understanding radiation safety through half-life:

Waste Management

Long-term storage considerations:

Common Misconceptions

Master radioactive decay calculations with our comprehensive half-life calculator, designed for students, researchers, and professionals in nuclear science, geology, medicine, and environmental studies.