Physics, asked by Riya172003, 11 months ago

What are the laws of radioactive decay?

Answers

Answered by jeslinbenittaj
2

Explanation:

The radioactive decay law states that the probability per unit time that a nucleus will decay is a constant, independent of time. This constant is called the decay constant and is denoted by λ, “lambda”. This constant probability may vary greatly between different types of nuclei, leading to the many different observed decay rates. The radioactive decay of certain number of atoms (mass) is exponential in time.

Radioactive decay law: N = N.e-λt

Answered by vyshnavi74
1

Answer:

The radioactive decay law states that the probability per unit time that a nucleus will decay is a constant, independent of time. This constant is called the decay constant and is denoted by λ, “lambda”. ... The radioactive decay of certain number of atoms (mass) is exponential in time.

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