Page:Radio-activity.djvu/464

 *activity, it is seen that they may be divided broadly into two classes, one of which assumes that the energy emitted from the radio-elements is obtained at the expense of the internal energy of the atom, and the other that the energy is derived from external sources, but that the radio-elements act as mechanisms capable of transforming this borrowed energy into the special forms manifested in the phenomena of radio-activity. Of these two sets of hypotheses the first appears to be the more probable, and to be best supported by the experimental evidence. Up to the present not the slightest experimental evidence has been adduced to show that the energy of radium is derived from external sources.

J. J. Thomson (loc. cit.) has discussed the question in the following way:—

"It has been suggested that the radium derives its energy from the air surrounding it, that the atoms of radium possess the faculty of abstracting the kinetic energy from the more rapidly moving air molecules while they are able to retain their own energy when in collision with the slowly moving molecules of air. I cannot see, however, that even the possession of this property would explain the behaviour of radium; for imagine a portion of radium placed in a cavity in a block of ice; the ice around the radium gets melted; where does the energy for this come from? By the hypothesis there is no change in the air-radium system in the cavity, for the energy gained by the radium is lost by the air, while heat cannot flow into the cavity from the outside, for the melted ice round the cavity is hotter than the ice surrounding it."

The writer has recently found that the activity of radium is not altered by surrounding it with a large mass of lead. A cylinder of lead was cast 10 cms. in diameter and 10 cms. high. A hole was bored in one end of the cylinder to the centre, and the radium, enclosed in a small glass tube, was placed in the cavity. The opening was then hermetically closed. The activity was measured by the rate of discharge of an electroscope by the γ rays transmitted through the lead, but no appreciable change was observed during a period of one month.

M. and Mme Curie early made the suggestion that the radiation of energy from the radio-active bodies might be accounted for by supposing that space is traversed by a type of Röntgen rays, and