batemaneq

batemaneq provides a Python package for evaluating the Bateman equation


Keywords
analytic, arbitrary-precision, decay
License
BSD-3-Clause
Install
pip install batemaneq==0.2.2

Documentation

batemaneq

Build status PyPI version Python version License coverage

batemaneq provides a C++ implementation of the Bateman equation, and a Python bidning thereof.

Documentation

Autogenerated API documentation is found here: http://hera.physchem.kth.se/~batemaneq/branches/master/html

Installation

Simplest way to install batemaneq and is to use pip (requires a C++11 compliant compiler to be installed for the C++ version):

$ pip install batemaneq

or using the conda package manager:

$ conda install -c bjodah batemaneq pytest
$ python -m pytest --pyargs batemaneq

Examples

See examples/, and rendered jupyter notebooks here: http://hera.physchem.kth.se/~batemaneq/branches/master/examples

The Thorium series

Half-lives shorter than 1h excluded from the decay chain:

In Python:

>>> from batemaneq import bateman_parent
>>> from math import log as ln
>>> d = 1./365  # Th-232 Ra-228 Ac-228 Th-228
>>> h = d/24    # Ra-224 Pb-212 Bi-212 (Pb-208)
>>> Thalf = [1.405e10, 5.75, 6.25*h, 1.9116, 3.6319*d, 10.64*h, 60.55/60*h]
>>> bateman_parent([ln(2)/x for x in Thalf], 100)  # 100 years
[0.9999999950665681, 4.0925028658312447e-10, 5.078051001187696e-14, 1.3605575316895603e-10, 7.082081172329036e-13, 8.64484883194704e-14, 8.199335787638167e-15]

In C++:

#include <cmath>
#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
#include <vector>
#include "bateman.hpp"

using vec_t = std::vector<double>;
double exp_cb(double arg){
    return std::exp(arg);
}

int main(){
   double one = 1;
   double d = one/365;
   double h = d/24;
   double ln2 = std::log(2);
   vec_t lmbd {{ ln2/1.405e10, ln2/5.75, ln2/(6.25*h),
       ln2/1.9116, ln2/(3.6319*d), ln2/(10.64*h), ln2/(60.55/60*h) }};
   auto p = bateman::bateman_parent(lmbd, 100.0, exp_cb);
   std::cout << std::setprecision(17);  // all significant digits
   for (auto v : p)
       std::cout << v << " ";
   std::cout << std::endl;
   return 0;
}
$ g++ -std=c++11 double.cpp -I../include
$ ./a.out
0.99999999506656811 4.0925028658312447e-10 5.0780510011876959e-14 1.3605575316895603e-10 7.0820811723290359e-13 8.6448488319470398e-14 8.1993357876381666e-15

In C++ using boost::multiprecision::cpp_dec_float_50:

#include <cmath>
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>
#include <boost/multiprecision/cpp_dec_float.hpp>
#include "bateman.hpp"

using Real_t = boost::multiprecision::cpp_dec_float_50;
using vec_t = std::vector<Real_t>;
Real_t exp_cb(Real_t arg){
    return boost::multiprecision::exp(arg);
}

int main(){
   Real_t one = 1;
   Real_t d = one/365;
   Real_t h = d/24;
   Real_t ln2 = boost::multiprecision::log(2*one);
   vec_t lmbd {{ ln2/1.405e10, ln2/5.75, ln2/(6.25*h),
       ln2/1.9116, ln2/(3.6319*d), ln2/(10.64*h), ln2/(60.55/60*h) }};
   auto p = bateman::bateman_parent(lmbd, static_cast<Real_t>(100), exp_cb);
   std::cout << std::setprecision(30);  // show 30 of our 50 digits
   for (auto v : p)
       std::cout << v << " ";
   std::cout << std::endl;
   return 0;
}
$ g++ -std=c++11 multi.cpp -I../include
$ ./a.out
0.999999995066568122063002778128 4.09250286583124398565537707859e-10 5.07805100118769662240802082504e-14 1.3605575316895606205575997585e-10 7.08208117232903695657287769184e-13 8.6448488319470425326824303941e-14 8.19933578763816849146541981927e-15

We see that the concentration of the final nuclide only varies in the 15th decimal place (we had no catastropic cancelation in this example).

License

The source code is Open Source and is released under the very permissive "simplified (2-clause) BSD license". See LICENSE.txt for further details.

Contributors are welcome to suggest improvements at https://github.com/bjodah/batemaneq

Author

Björn I. Dahlgren, contact:

  • gmail address: bjodah