Tossing candies (or whatever you used) was a great way to simulate half-life because it showed how almost half of the parent atoms decay into daughter atoms after each half-life.

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True. Tossing candies or any other objects can serve as a visual demonstration of the concept of half-life. By starting with a group of candies representing parent atoms and removing half of them after each "half-life," you can simulate the decay of the parent atoms into daughter atoms. This process mimics the decay of radioactive isotopes, where the parent atoms gradually transform into daughter atoms over time.

True. Tossing candies or any other objects can be a great way to simulate the concept of half-life. In each round, you can remove about half of the "parent" objects, representing the decay of atoms in a radioactive material. The remaining objects represent the "daughter" atoms after each half-life. This simulation can help visualize how the number of parent atoms decreases over time while the number of daughter atoms increases.