anna has there ever been a time you haven't agreed with meI agree with clintmyster. It's not hard though, you just have to know what it is and what the half life for the radioisotopes you've chosen to memorise are
I guess it would come under properties of radioisotopes.
+1 to both aboveBut its an important property of many radioisotopes that make them useful for their use? I say learn a general idea about it so then you know how to use it in an answer.
Great minds think alikeanna has there ever been a time you haven't agreed with me
If they did that, you'd just look for the time where the amount/mass of the radioisotopes is first halved from its original mass- this would be its half life. I've never seen a question like that though.but the questions are not about what the half life of certain radioisotopes more like giving you all these numbers and figure out what the half life is :mad1:
hhaa yeah!Great minds think alike
And ooo we do the same subjects except i do modern while you do ancient aha.
If they did that, you'd just look for the time where the amount/mass of the radioisotopes is first halved from its original mass- this would be its half life. I've never seen a question like that though.
I never learnt any nuclear chemistry in year 10hhaa yeah!
Isn't that sort of half-life question in like yr 10 science? Besides I think you need to know more about half-lives for phys for your option if you do medical phys like I do haha
Didn't you need to learn about half-lives, isotopes and radioisotopes and give like definitions of them? Iuno this is what i remember doing haha.I never learnt any nuclear chemistry in year 10
My school is doing astrophysics so meh, stuff 1/2 lives lol.
By the way, if they give you the question it'll probably be a graph
I knew what an isotope was, though i don't know if that was from extra curricular activities or from school =="Didn't you need to learn about half-lives, isotopes and radioisotopes and give like definitions of them? Iuno this is what i remember doing haha.
True that though, if anything, it'd be a graph.
Isn't there a dotpoint about the oxidation state of species?By the way, there are other things that aren't on the syllabus that they are sneaking into the HSC, such as oxidisation/reduction numbers.