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| Question 463878:  I have a question regarding radioactive decay. I am trying to solve the following problem:
 A certain amount of radioactive material decays according to the function A(t)=Ao e^-3t, where time is measured in hours. What is the half-life of the material in hours?
 So I know that I'm trying to find when A(t) equals half the original amount (Ao), but I'm not sure how to solve. I know that the solution is supposed to be ln(2)/3, just wondering how to get there.
 Thanks,
 Jessica
 Answer by stanbon(75887)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! A certain amount of radioactive material decays according to the function A(t)= Ao e^-3t, where time is measured in hours. What is the half-life of the material in hours?
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 So I know that I'm trying to find when A(t) equals half the original amount (Ao), but I'm not sure how to solve. I know that the solution is supposed to be ln(2)/3, just wondering how to get there.
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 Let A(t) = (1/2)Ao
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 Solve: (1/2)Ao = Ao*e^-3t
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 e^-3t = (1/2)
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 Take the ln of both sides:
 -3t = ln(1/2)
 -3t = -ln(2)
 t = [ln(2)]/3
 t = 0.2318 years
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 Cheers,
 Stan H.
 
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