At the end of World War II, Dutch authorities arrested Dutch artist Hans van Meegeren for treason

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At the end of World War II, Dutch authorities arrested Dutch artist Hans van Meegeren for treason because, during the war, he had sold a masterpiece painting to the Nazi Hermann Goering. The painting, Christ and His Disciples at Emmaus by Dutch master Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675), had been discovered in 1937 by van Meegeren, after it had been lost for almost 300 years. Soon after the discovery, art experts proclaimed that Emmaus was possibly the best Vermeer ever seen. Selling such a Dutch national treasure to the enemy was unthinkable treason. However, shortly after being imprisoned, van Meegeren suddenly announced that he, not Vermeer, had painted Emmaus. He explained that he had carefully mimicked Vermeer's style, using a 300-year old canvas and Vermeer's choice of pigments; he had then signed Vermeer's name to the work and baked the painting to give it an authentically old look. Was van Meegeren lying to avoid a conviction of treason, hoping to be convicted of only the lesser crime of fraud? To art experts, Emmaus certainly looked like a Vermeer but, at the time of van Meegeren's trial in 1947, there was no scientific way to answer the question. However, in 1968 Bernard Keisch of Carnegie-Mellon University was able to answer the question with newly developed techniques of radioactive analysis. Specifically, he analyzed a small sample of white lead bearing pigment removed from Emmaus. This pigment is refined from lead ore, in which the lead is produced by a long radioactive decay series that starts with unstable 238U and ends with stable 206Pb. To follow the spirit of Keisch's analysis, focus on the following abbreviated portion of that decay series, in which intermediate, relatively short-lived radio-nuclides have been omitted. The longer and more important half-lives in this portion of the decay series are indicated.

(a) Show that in a sample of lead ore, the rat e at which the number of 210Pb nuclei changes is given by, where N210 and N226 are the numbers of 210Pb nuclei and 226Ra nuclei in the sample and λ210 and λ226 are the corresponding disintegration constants. Because the decay series has been active for billions of years and because the half-life of 210Pb is much less than that of 226Ra, the nuclides 226Ra and 226Pb are in equilibrium; that is, the numbers of these nuclides (and thus their concentrations) in the sample do not change.

(b) What is the ratio R226/R210 of the activities of these nuclides in the sample of lead ore? 

(c) What is the ratio N226/N210 of their numbers? When lead pigment is refined from the ore, most of the 226Ra is eliminated. Assume that only 1.00% remains. Just after the pigment is produced, what are the ratios?

(d) R226/R210 and

(e) N226/N210? Keisch realized that with time the ratio R226/R210 of the pigment would gradually change from the value in freshly refined pigment back to the value in the ore, as equilibrium between the 210Pb and the remaining 226Ra is established in the pigment. If Emmaus were painted by Vermeer and the sample of pigment taken from it was 300 years old when examined in 1968, the ratio would be close to the answer of (b). If Emmaus were painted by van Meegeren in the 1930s and the sample were only about 30 years old, the ratio would be close to the answer of (d). Keisch found a ratio of 0.09.

(f) Is Emmaus a Vermeer?

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Fundamentals of Physics

ISBN: 978-0471758013

8th Extended edition

Authors: Jearl Walker, Halliday Resnick

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