First all, the decay formula is
where:
is the remaining quantity after
years
is the initial sample
is the time in years
is the decay constant
From the problem we know that
and
, but we don't have the time
; to find it we will take advantage of the half-life of the Carbon-14. If you have a sample of 100 mg and Carbon-14 has a half-life of 5730, after 5730 years you will have half of your original sample i.e. 50 mg. We also know that after
years we have a remaining sample of 33mg, so the amount of the sample that decayed is
. Knowing all of this we can set up a rule 3 and solve it to find
:
Now that we know our time
lets replace all the values into our decay formula:
Notice that the constant
we need to find is the exponent; we must use logarithms to bring it down, but first lets isolate the exponential expression:
We can conclude that the decay constant
is approximately -0.000144