Learning objective
Determine half-life from a table of count-rate or activity data.
Read the explanation, check the common trap, then practise with flashcards and questions.
At a glance
5
Flashcards
7
Questions
Topic
Atoms and nuclear radiation
Subtopic
Half-lives and the random nature of radioactive decay
Study support
Understand this objective
Short explanation
Within Half-lives and the random nature of radioactive decay, this learning objective asks you to determine half-life from a table of count-rate or activity data. Focus on the approved ideas activity, half-life and connect them clearly to Atoms and nuclear radiation. A strong response should state the relevant particle, radiation, isotope, decay, half-life or nuclear-equation idea, then explain how it answers the exact command word. Avoid swapping nearby concepts such as atomic number and mass number, isotope and ion, alpha, beta and gamma radiation, or contamination and irradiation.
Key concepts
Why it matters
This objective helps connect Half-lives and the random nature of radioactive decay to exam-style questions, flashcards, and revision notes for Atoms and nuclear radiation.
Common mistakes
1 linked- Misunderstanding Half-Life Calculation: Emphasize that half-life is the time taken for half of the radioactive nuclei to decay, not the time for the entire sample to decay.
Revision tools
Choose how to practise
Flashcards5 linked cards
Flashcard 1 of 5
Practice Questions7 linked questions
Question 1 of 7
Choose an answer, get feedback, then move sideways through the set.
Revision notestopic notes
Open the full topic revision notes when you are ready to review this objective in context.
Open revision notesRelated learning objectives
- Define radioactive decay as the process in which an unstable nucleus emits radiation.
Radioactive decay and nuclear radiation
- State that radioactive decay is a random process.
Radioactive decay and nuclear radiation
- Explain that radioactive decay changes the nucleus of an atom.
Radioactive decay and nuclear radiation
- Describe alpha radiation as a helium nucleus containing two protons and two neutrons.
Radioactive decay and nuclear radiation
- Describe beta radiation as a high-speed electron emitted from the nucleus.
Radioactive decay and nuclear radiation
