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Physics / Modern Physics

Radioactive Decay Model

Explore Radioactive Decay Model as an interactive EJS simulation for modern physics.

Radioactive Decay Model preview image

1. Watch or Launch

Teacher Demonstration

Use the live model as a shared screen demonstration before students try their own predictions and observations.

Launch the Interactive

Open the simulation, adjust the controls, and compare what changes on screen before answering the concept-check questions.

Launch Interactive

2. Big Ideas

Key idea Radioactive decay models show statistical change in a population of nuclei. The meaningful evidence is the number remaining, activity or graph shape, half-life, and the randomness of individual decay events.

What Students Can Learn

  • Read the undecayed count or activity against time.
  • Connect half-life to a population falling by half, not a fixed decay time for each nucleus.
  • Use dice or repeated trials to discuss randomness and sample size.
  • Compare parent, intermediate, and daughter populations in three-state models.

Guiding Question

How does the displayed count or activity change over time, and what does that show about half-life and random decay?

3. Try the Investigation

Record the Starting Population

Note the initial number of nuclei, dice, or parent atoms before running the model.

Run One Interval

Observe how many decay events occur and how many undecayed nuclei remain.

Compare Several Intervals

Use the graph or counts to see whether the population falls in a half-life pattern.

Discuss Randomness

Compare repeated runs or dice trials to separate random individual events from the overall decay trend.

4. Teacher Notes

Lesson Use

Use this as a probability-and-population lesson. Ask students to explain why individual decay is unpredictable but the population trend can still be modelled.

Discussion Prompts

Ask: What halves during one half-life? Why do repeated dice runs differ? How does a larger sample make the decay curve smoother?

Teaching Moves

Have students annotate the graph at successive half-lives and describe the surviving fraction. For dice pages, compare two runs before discussing expected behaviour.

Model Notes

Target the displayed count, activity, graph shape, and dice/random trial mechanism. Avoid only saying 'radioactivity decreases' without time and population evidence.

5. Concept Check

These questions are generated from the topic and the concept illustrated by the simulation. Use them after students have explored the model.

Concept Score

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1. What is the main value of using Radioactive Decay Model as a simulation?

2. Which habit makes the investigation more reliable?

3. What should students use as evidence in their explanation?

4. Why is comparing two settings useful?

5. What is a strong final response after using the simulation?

Expert Challenge

Unlocks after 3 correct concept-check answers on this page.

Locked

1. In a radioactive-decay interactive, what should students compare as time passes?

2. What feedback fits 'half-life means all nuclei decay exactly halfway through the run'?

3. How should students use the dice-decay model?

4. What should students check in a three-state decay model?

5. What makes a nuclear-decay answer expert-level?

7. Learning Pulse

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