A radioactive substance decays at a rate of y = ae^-0.1483t, where t in in hours. Find the half-life of the substance.

How do I solve this problem if I am only given the constant.

so you want:

(1/2)a = ae^(-.1483t)

.5 = e^(-.1486t)
take ln of both sides and use rules of logs

-.1486t = ln .5
t = ln .5/-.1486 = appr 4.66 hours

To find the half-life of a substance, we need to determine the time it takes for half of the substance to decay.

In the given equation y = ae^-0.1483t, y represents the amount of the substance remaining at time t, and a is the initial amount at time t=0.

To find the half-life, we need to set y equal to half of the initial amount (a/2), and then solve for t.

So, we have:

a/2 = ae^-0.1483t

To solve for t, we can cancel out the common factor 'a' on both sides of the equation:

1/2 = e^-0.1483t

Next, we can take the natural logarithm (ln) of both sides of the equation to isolate the exponential term:

ln(1/2) = ln[e^-0.1483t]

Using the property ln(a^b) = b * ln(a), we can simplify the equation further:

ln(1/2) = -0.1483t * ln(e)

Since ln(e) equals 1, the equation becomes:

ln(1/2) = -0.1483t

Now, we can solve for t by isolating it on one side of the equation:

t = ln(1/2) / -0.1483

Using a calculator, we can evaluate ln(1/2) ≈ -0.693:

t ≈ -0.693 / -0.1483

t ≈ 4.678 hours

Therefore, the half-life of the substance is approximately 4.678 hours.