Radioactive Dating of Rocks
Looking at the Moon's surface we have used relative terms
("older" and "younger")
to describe the various regions of the Moon. How can we assign absolute
ages to the lunar surfaces? And
what would this tell us about the conditions in the early solar system?
Radioactive Dating
Use the fact that many elements
have radioactive isotopes, that is, unstable forms of the element which
radioactively decay (change) into other forms. For example Rubidium into
Strontium:
The rate at which the atoms decay
is given in units of inverse seconds:
So we can define the rate of change of the abundances
of an isotope as
Or, shuffling terms,
So let's integrate this. at t=0,
there was some initial abundance N_0
of the isotope in the rock. At the present time t,
the abundance is N. So integrate like
this:
We get
Or, finally
Lets define the half-life
of a radioactive isotope to be the time it takes for half of it to go away:
or
Different decays have different half-lives:
Decay
|
Half Life
|
(129)Iodine to (129)Xenon
|
16 million years
|
(235)Uranium to (207)Lead
|
700 million years
|
(40)Krypton to (40)Argon
|
1.28 billion years
|
(238)Uranium to (206)Lead
|
4.47 billion years
|
(232)Thorium to (208)Lead
|
14.0 billion years
|
(87)Rubidium to (87)Strontium
|
47.5 billion years
|
How do we use this to age date rocks (from Earth or
Moon)?
-
Pick up a rock.
-
Measure the amount of (87)Rubidium in it.
-
Calculate an age!
Is it really that easy?
Nope... why not???