Nuclear physics: determine the date of the Chernobyl accident

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the date of the Chernobyl disaster using the measured activities of isotopes 131I and 133I in Gothenburg on April 28, 1986. The user initially calculated the explosion date as April 27, 02:44:53, which was incorrect compared to the widely accepted date of April 26, 1986, at 01:23:45 a.m. (UTC+3). After receiving guidance on the equations and methodology, the user successfully recalculated the date. The conversation highlights the importance of accurately applying decay equations in nuclear physics. The user expressed gratitude for the assistance received.
Bapelsin
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Homework Statement



The acitvities from the fission products 131I and 133I were measured in the air of Gothenburg April 28 1986 at 17:00. The result was 0.12 Bq/m3 and 0.39 Bq/m3 for 131I and 133I respectively. These isotopes came from the Chernobyl nuclear reactor disaster. Use this information to calculate when the reactor container exploded. The relative amount of 131I and 133 produced in the fission of 236U is 2.892 and 6.686 percent respectively.

Homework Equations



t½(131I) = 8 days = 24 x 60 x 60 x 8 seconds = 691200 sec
t½(133I) = 21 hours = 21 x 60 x 60 seconds = 75600 sec

The activity for short-lived nuclides: A(t)=\lambda N_{0}e^{-\lambda t}, where A is the acitivity, N the number of radioactive nuclei and N_{0}=N(t=0)

The Attempt at a Solution



The decay law, numerical values inserted for ^{131}I and ^{133}I respectively, divided by each other to get rid of N_{0} which is unknown:

\frac{2.892 \times 0.12}{6.686 \times 0.39}=\frac{e^{-\lambda_{131}t}}{e^{-\lambda_{133}t}}

Some algebra gives t=137707 seconds. Subtracting this from the given date gives April 27 02:44:53 as the date of the Chernobyl disaster. Wikipedia (for instance) states that the accident happened "26 April 1986 01:23:45 a.m. (UTC+3)" which is the same as April 26, 03:23:45 a.m Gothenburg time. Since my solution is so far off from the actual date I figured I must have done something wrong. Can anybody help me out here, please?

Thanks in advance!
 
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Dear uppsala student

the equations you can have is:

0.12 = N_o(131) Lambda(131) exp(- Lambda(131) T )

0.39 = N_0(133) Lambda(133) exp(- Lambda(133) T )

and at T = 0:
(N_o(131))/(N_o(133)) = 2.891/6.686

Right?

Now try again
 
Thanks for you help! I got it right this time! :smile:
 
Bapelsin said:
Thanks for you help! I got it right this time! :smile:

Great, good luck on the exam
 
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