Carbon-14 has a half-life of 5730 years. How long will it take 17 grams of carbon-14 to be reduced to 10 grams? Round to the nearest integer.

Mer? Is that you? It's Brittany!

17(1/2)^(t/5730) = 10

(1/2)^(t/5730) = 10/17
take log of both sides and use rules of logs
(t/5730) log .5 = log10 - lot17
t/5730 = (1 - log17)/log.5

t = 5730(1 - log17)/log .5 = appr 4387 years

To solve this problem, we can use the concept of exponential decay with the formula:

N(t) = N₀ * (1/2)^(t / T)

Where:
- N(t) is the amount of the substance remaining after time t
- N₀ is the initial amount of the substance
- t is the time that has passed
- T is the half-life of the substance

In this case, we know that the initial amount of carbon-14 is 17 grams, and we want to find the time it takes for it to be reduced to 10 grams. So, let's substitute the given values into the formula:

10 = 17 * (1/2)^(t / 5730)

To solve for t, we can take the logarithm of both sides with a base of 1/2:

log₁/₂(10/17) = t / 5730

Now, we can solve for t:

t = 5730 * log₁/₂(10/17)

Using a calculator to evaluate the right-hand side, we find t ≈ 1972.5. Thus, it will take approximately 1972.5 years for 17 grams of carbon-14 to be reduced to 10 grams.

Finally, rounding to the nearest integer, the answer is approximately 1973 years.