Radioactive Dice (Advanced)
Radioactive Dice (Advanced)
Exponential Decay
Radioactive decay follows an exponential decline given by
=
|| = − + | |
So we can plot a graph of
|| against , and we should find a straight line with a gradient of –
and a y intercept of
| |.
||
=
In this experiment you will roll 100 ten-sided dice, with each die representing one unstable nucleus.
You are going to run a simulation for 20 rolls (20 units of time) for three types of radioactive
substance: relatively stable (1 in 10 chance of decay), unstable (2 in 10 chance of decaying) or very
unstable (4 in 10 chance of decaying).
So for the relatively stable substance, select one number between 0 and 9. Then roll all the dice at
once (use the tray provided). All dice that show the number you selected must be removed, counted
and NOT replaced. Keep these to one side. Then reroll all the remaining dice and repeat this process.
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Radioactive Dice (Advanced) A2 Unit 5
For the unstable nucleus you will select two numbers, and for the very unstable nucleus four
numbers.
Complete each run for 20 rolls (or until all the atoms are decayed), recording the activity, A, (i.e.
how many unstable atoms decayed with that roll) and the number of unstable nuclei remaining, N.
Plot a graph of
|| against , for each ‘substance’ (you can do all three on the same axes). Label
each curve clearly.
Relatively stable
=
=
| | =
Unstable
=
=
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Very stable
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=
| | =
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