Question detail

What happens to the count rate of a radioactive sample after one half-life?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Atoms and nuclear radiation

Question

  1. A. It doubles
  2. B. It remains the same
  3. C. It falls to zero
  4. D. It is halved

Answer

The correct answer is D: It is halved.

Explanation

The correct answer is D: It is halved. This supports the learning objective "Define half-life as the time taken for the count rate or activity from a source to fall to half its initial value." in Half-lives and the random nature of radioactive decay because it uses the correct atomic and nuclear radiation relationship for Atoms and nuclear radiation. The other options are less suitable because they do not match the required Half-lives and the random nature of radioactive decay idea: It doubles; It remains the same; It falls to zero.

Common mistake

Misunderstanding Half-Life Definition

Students often confuse half-life with the total time it takes for a radioactive substance to decay completely, rather than understanding it as the time taken for the count rate or activity to fall to half its initial value.

To fix this, students should focus on the definition of half-life as a specific time interval where only half of the original amount remains, rather than the total decay time.

Related flashcards

Flashcard 1 of 5

Press Space to flip, arrows to move

Related practice questions

Question 1 of 5

Choose an answer, get feedback, then move sideways through the set.

0 of 4 attempted
understanding MCQ 3: to half its initial value. | Atoms and… | ExamCompanion