Page:Radio-activity.djvu/457

 '''253. Number of β particles expelled from one gram of radium.''' It is of importance to compare the total number of β particles expelled from one gram of radium in radio-active equilibrium, as, theoretically, this number should bear a definite relation to the total number of α particles emitted. We have seen that new radium in radio-active equilibrium contains four products which emit α rays, viz. radium itself, the emanation, radium A and radium C. On the other hand, β rays are expelled from only one product, radium C. The same number of atoms of each of these successive products in equilibrium break up per second. If the disintegration of each atom is accompanied by the expulsion of one α particle and, in the case of radium C, also of one β particle, the number of α particles emitted from radium in radio-active equilibrium will be four times the number of β particles.

The method employed by Wien to determine the number of β particles emitted from a known quantity of radium has already been discussed in section 80. On account of the absorption of some of the β particles in the radium envelope and in the radium itself, the number found by him is far too small. It has been shown in section 85 that a number of easily absorbed β rays are projected from radium, many of which would be stopped in the radium itself or in the envelope containing it.

In order to eliminate as far as possible the error due to this absorption, in some experiments made by the writer, the active deposit obtained from the radium emanation rather than radium itself was used as a source of β rays. A lead rod, 4 cms. long and 4 mms. in diameter, was exposed as the negative electrode in a large quantity of the radium emanation for three hours. The rod was then removed and the γ ray effect from it immediately measured by an electroscope and compared with the corresponding γ ray effect from a known weight of radium bromide in radio-active equilibrium. Since the active deposit contains the product radium C which alone emits β rays, and, since the intensities of the β and γ rays are always proportional to each other, the number of β particles expelled from the lead rod per second is equal to the corresponding number from the weight of radium bromide which gives the same γ ray effect as the lead rod.

The rod was then enveloped in a thickness of aluminium foil