ChatterBank1 min ago
Geiger Counter Fun
41 Answers
Has anyone here had any fun with one of these?
I bought one recently and did some exploring with it...
Background radiation where I live: average 0.1 microsieverts/hour
'vaseline glass' sugar bowl I have: 0.8 (the glass contains uranium oxide)
Background radiation on a recent flight at about 30,000ft: 4.0!
Takumar 50mm vintage camera lens: 24.0!! (the glass contains thorium)
Porst 55mm lens: 20.0 (thorium again)
Vintage mantle-clock with luminous hands/dial owned by me Mum: 7.0
Also I got a higher than normal background radiation result walking under an old red brick railway bridge recently - which was odd.
I bought one recently and did some exploring with it...
Background radiation where I live: average 0.1 microsieverts/hour
'vaseline glass' sugar bowl I have: 0.8 (the glass contains uranium oxide)
Background radiation on a recent flight at about 30,000ft: 4.0!
Takumar 50mm vintage camera lens: 24.0!! (the glass contains thorium)
Porst 55mm lens: 20.0 (thorium again)
Vintage mantle-clock with luminous hands/dial owned by me Mum: 7.0
Also I got a higher than normal background radiation result walking under an old red brick railway bridge recently - which was odd.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks for that Chris - this is a YT clip I missed and I've watched quite a lot of stuff :-)
He's using something called a 'pancake probe' on that Geiger counter - which will measure all types of ionising radiation including and especially alpha particles, the latter of which he's talking about not being able to make it through paper.
I have a little 'glow stick' that contains tritium gas - which is radioactive but doesn't register at all on my GC because the radiation is alpha.
Will post as soon as I get hold of a smoke detector that I can dismember!
He's using something called a 'pancake probe' on that Geiger counter - which will measure all types of ionising radiation including and especially alpha particles, the latter of which he's talking about not being able to make it through paper.
I have a little 'glow stick' that contains tritium gas - which is radioactive but doesn't register at all on my GC because the radiation is alpha.
Will post as soon as I get hold of a smoke detector that I can dismember!
I used to have a Geiger counter (till I sold it on eBay) I had some natural granite samples from Scotland. The Granite was so radio active that if it had been in a laboratory it would have been classified as a radio active source and be a 'controlled substance'
A lot of vintage USSR camera lenses are radio active due to Elements in the glass. The 'Industar 61' is often called the 'radioactive lens'
A lot of vintage USSR camera lenses are radio active due to Elements in the glass. The 'Industar 61' is often called the 'radioactive lens'
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