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Arfken MMCH 7 S 2 e 13

This document provides the solution to an exercise involving a system of two differential equations describing the decay of radioactive nuclei. The equations are solved to find an expression for N2(t) given initial conditions of N1(0)=N0 and N2(0)=0. There are two cases: if the decay constants λ1 and λ2 are different, the solution is N2(t)=N0(λ1/λ2-λ1)(e-λ1t - e-λ2t). If the decay constants are equal, the solution is N2(t)=N0λ2te-λ2t.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
123 views3 pages

Arfken MMCH 7 S 2 e 13

This document provides the solution to an exercise involving a system of two differential equations describing the decay of radioactive nuclei. The equations are solved to find an expression for N2(t) given initial conditions of N1(0)=N0 and N2(0)=0. There are two cases: if the decay constants λ1 and λ2 are different, the solution is N2(t)=N0(λ1/λ2-λ1)(e-λ1t - e-λ2t). If the decay constants are equal, the solution is N2(t)=N0λ2te-λ2t.

Uploaded by

Helen Mena
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Arfken Mathematical Methods 7e: Section 7.2 - Exercise 7.2.

13 Page 1 of 3

Exercise 7.2.13
Radioactive nuclei decay according to the law
dN
= −λN,
dt
N being the concentration of a given nuclide and λ, the particular decay constant. In a
radioactive series of two different nuclides, with concentrations N1 (t) and N2 (t), we have
dN1
= −λ1 N1 ,
dt
dN2
= λ1 N1 − λ2 N2 .
dt
Find N2 (t) for the conditions N1 (0) = N0 and N2 (0) = 0.

Solution

Begin by solving the ODE for N1 (t). Divide both sides by N1 .


dN1
dt
= −λ1
N1
The left side can be written as the derivative of a logarithm by the chain rule.
d
(ln N1 ) = −λ1
dt
Integrate both sides with respect to t.

ln N1 = −λ1 t + C1

Exponentiate both sides.

N1 (t) = e−λ1 t+C1


= e−λ1 t eC1

Apply the initial condition N1 (0) = N0 to determine eC1 .

N (0) = e−λ1 (0) eC1 → N0 = eC1

So then
N1 (t) = N0 e−λ1 t .
Substitute this formula for N1 into the second ODE involving N2 .
dN2
= λ1 N1 − λ2 N2
dt
dN2
= λ1 N0 e−λ1 t − λ2 N2
dt
Bring λ2 N2 to the left side.
dN2
+ λ2 N2 = λ1 N0 e−λ1 t
dt

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Arfken Mathematical Methods 7e: Section 7.2 - Exercise 7.2.13 Page 2 of 3

This is a first-order linear ODE, so it can be solved by multiplying both sides by an integrating
factor I. ˆ t 
I = exp λ2 ds = eλ2 t

Proceed with the multiplication.


dN2
e λ2 t + λ2 eλ2 t N2 = λ1 eλ2 t N0 e−λ1 t
dt
The left side can now be written as a derivative by the product rule. Combine the exponential
functions on the right side.
d λ2 t
(e N2 ) = N0 λ1 e(λ2 −λ1 )t (1)
dt
Suppose first that λ1 6= λ2 . Integrate both sides with respect to t.
λ1
eλ2 t N2 = N0 e(λ2 −λ1 )t + C2
λ2 − λ1

Divide both sides by eλ2 t .


λ1
N2 (t) = N0 e(λ2 −λ1 )t e−λ2 t + C2 e−λ2 t
λ2 − λ1
λ1
= N0 e−λ1 t + C2 e−λ2 t
λ2 − λ1
Apply the initial condition N2 (0) = 0 now to determine C2 .

λ1
N2 (0) = N0 e−λ1 (0) + C2 e−λ2 (0)
λ2 − λ1
λ1
0 = N0 + C2
λ2 − λ1
λ1
C2 = −N0
λ2 − λ1
Plug this back into the general solution for N2 (t).

λ1 λ1
N2 (t) = N0 e−λ1 t − N0 e−λ2 t
λ2 − λ1 λ2 − λ1
λ1
= N0 (e−λ1 t − e−λ2 t ), λ1 6= λ2
λ2 − λ1
Suppose secondly that λ1 = λ2 . Then equation (1) becomes

d λ2 t
(e N2 ) = N0 λ2 .
dt
Integrate both sides with respect to t.

eλ2 t N2 = N0 λ2 t + C3

Divide both sides by eλ2 t .


N2 (t) = e−λ2 t (N0 λ2 t + C3 )

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Arfken Mathematical Methods 7e: Section 7.2 - Exercise 7.2.13 Page 3 of 3

Apply the initial condition N2 (0) = 0 to determine C3 .

N2 (0) = C3 = 0

So then
N2 (t) = N0 λ2 te−λ2 t , λ1 = λ2 .
Therefore,

N1 (t) = N0 e−λ1 t
 λ1
N0
 (e−λ1 t − e−λ2 t ) if λ1 =
6 λ2
N2 (t) = λ2 − λ 1 .


N0 λ2 te 2−λ t if λ1 = λ2

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