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half-life

Or half life,

[haf-lahyf]

noun

plural

half-lives 
  1. Physics.,  the time required for one half the atoms of a given amount of a radioactive substance to disintegrate.

  2. Also called biological half-lifePharmacology.,  the time required for the activity of a substance taken into the body to lose one half its initial effectiveness.

  3. Informal.,  a brief period during which something flourishes before dying out.



half-life

noun

  1. τthe time taken for half of the atoms in a radioactive material to undergo decay

  2. the time required for half of a quantity of radioactive material absorbed by a living tissue or organism to be naturally eliminated ( biological half-life ) or removed by both elimination and decay ( effective half-life )

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

half-life

  1. The average time needed for half the nuclei in a sample of a radioactive substance to undergo radioactive decay. The half-life of a substance does not equal half of its full duration of radioactivity. For example, if one starts with 100 grams of radium 229, whose half-life is 4 minutes, then after 4 minutes only 50 grams of radium will be left in the sample, after 8 minutes 25 grams will be left, after 12 minutes 12.5 grams will be left, and so on.

half-life

  1. In physics, a fixed time required for half the radioactive nuclei in a substance to decay. Half-lives of radioactive substances can range from fractions of a second to billions of years, and they are always the same for a given nucleus, regardless of temperature or other conditions. If an object contains a pound of a radioactive substance with a half-life of fifty years, at the end of that time there will be half a pound of the radioactive substance left undecayed in the object. After another fifty years, a quarter-pound will be left undecayed, and so on.

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Scientists can estimate the age of an object, such as a rock, by carefully measuring the amounts of decayed and undecayed nuclei in the object. Comparing that to the half-life of the nuclei tells when they started to decay and, therefore, how old the object is. (See radioactive dating.)
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Word History and Origins

Origin of half-life1

First recorded in 1905–10; half + life
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Over the next year, the Snack Wrap disappeared— not vanished, exactly, but exiled to the Canadian menu, where it lived out a quiet half-life among hockey arenas and polite condiments.

From Salon

His efforts to blame everyone else for his own failures are sure to have a very short half-life.

The medical examiner said the ketamine in Perry's system could not have been from the infusion therapy because of the drug's short half-life.

From BBC

Methane warms the planet 86 times more powerfully than carbon dioxide but has a much shorter half-life.

"We found that starvation had the greatest impact on the intermediate group of proteins in muscular cells, which have a half-life of a few hours, causing the breakdown to shift and accelerate," Collins said.

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