Page:Radio-activity.djvu/285

 consists of atoms which disintegrate at intervals nearly 6000 times shorter than those of the atoms of Th X.

Source of the Radium and Actinium Emanation.

155. No intermediate stage—Radium X—between radium and its emanation, corresponding to the Th X for thorium, has so far been observed. The emanation from radium is probably produced directly from that element. In this respect, the radium emanation holds the same position in regard to radium as Th X does to thorium, and its production from radium can be explained on exactly similar lines. It will be shown later in chapter X, that the emanation of actinium, like that of thorium, does not arise directly from the parent element but from an intermediate product actinium X, which is very analogous in physical and chemical properties to Th X.  Radiations from the Emanations.

156. Special methods are necessary to examine the nature of the radiation from the emanations, for the radiations arise from the volume of the gas in which the emanations are distributed. Some experiments to examine the radiations from the thorium emanation were made by the writer in the following way.

Fig. 55.

A highly emanating thorium compound wrapped in paper was placed inside a lead box B about 1 cm. deep, shown in Fig. 55. An opening was cut in the top of the box, over which a very thin sheet of mica was waxed. The emanation rapidly diffused through the paper into the vessel, and after ten minutes reached a state of radio-active equilibrium. The penetrating power of the radiation from the emanation which passed through the thin mica window was examined by the electrical method in the usual way by adding