DocumentCode :
1375972
Title :
Radiation measuring instruments for X-rays to cosmic rays
Author :
Taylor, D. ; Abson, W.
Volume :
98
Issue :
66
fYear :
1951
fDate :
12/1/1951 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
760
Lastpage :
770
Abstract :
The paper is a review of the techniques used in the detection and measurement of very-short-wave radiations (X-rays and ¿-rays) and nuclear and cosmic particles (¿-particles, ß-particles, protons, neutrons and mesons). The radiations and particles are classified under three headings¿X-rays and ¿-rays, charged particles, and uncharged particles; in each case an account is given of the more important measurable quantities (e.g. energy, W, flux of radiation, ¿, radiation dosage, r, etc.) and the physical basis of the method of measurement involved. The examples chosen to illustrate these techniques are process instruments developed at the Atomic Energy Research Establishment to provide continuous monitoring of ¿- and ß-activities in solution. In the ¿-activity monitoring instrument the pulse technique is used for recording individual particles, whereas in the ß-activity instrument the mean rate of ionization in an ionization chamber is measured as a direct current. Complete descriptions are given of both instruments, together with details of the performance characteristics obtained. The paper ends with a discussion of nucleonic-instrument design, and a number of aspects receive special mention, namely sourcedetector geometry, detectors in assay instruments, special problems associated with portable instruments and, lastly, materials and finishes for radioactive-contamination monitoring instruments.
Keywords :
X-ray diffraction; alpha-particle detection; beta-ray detection; cosmic ray apparatus; gamma-ray detection; geophysical prospecting; radiation monitoring; radioactivity measurement; radioactivity measuring apparatus;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IEE - Part II: Power Engineering
Publisher :
iet
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1049/pi-2.1951.0198
Filename :
5240050
Link To Document :
بازگشت