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7 January, 12:58

Suppose you find a rock originally made of potassium-40, half of which decays into argon-40 every 1.25 billion years. You open the rock and find 7 atoms of argon-40 for every atom of potassium-40. How long ago did the rock form?

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  1. 7 January, 16:00
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    3.75 billion years.

    Explanation:

    Let the amount of potassium-40 at the beginning be K.

    We can follow the decay with its half life.

    In 1 half life, the amount of potassium-40 left is K/2

    In 2 half lives, the amount left will be K/2²

    In 3 half lives, it will be K/2³

    In n half lives, it will be K/2ⁿ

    So, in n half lives, the amount of Argon left will be (K - (K/2ⁿ))

    In the question, it is described that the amount of Argon left = 7 * the amount of potassium-40 left

    (K - (K/2ⁿ)) = 7 (K/2ⁿ)

    K (1 - 2⁻ⁿ) = 7K/2ⁿ

    1 - 2⁻ⁿ = 7 (2⁻ⁿ)

    Divide through by 2⁻ⁿ

    (1/2⁻ⁿ) - 1 = 7

    2ⁿ = 7+1 = 8

    2ⁿ = 2³

    n = 3

    This means, we'll get 7 atoms of argon-40 for every atom of potassium-40 in 3 half life

    1 half life = 1.25 billion years

    3 half lives = 3 * 1.25 billion years = 3.75 billion years.
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