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Posted

Alright, for school this year I need to do an experiment having to do with either Nuclear Energy or just energy, and I have looked EVERYWHERE for 5 days and have NO ideas, maybe someone can help me?

Posted

Use a Geiger-counter to measure the radiation given off by some common every-day items.

 

Build a cloud-chamber from Lexan and dry ice

Posted

If you ever get access to a Geiger counter, take a walk with it along a railroad track, or breakwater. Odds are in less than an hour, you'll find some VERY hot chunks of ore bearing granite.

Posted

One thing to also remember is that a Geiger counter may go crazy and start crackling like crazy, but a Geiger counter only detects a decay event and not the strength of the event. If you have a sample that is decaying rapidly but giving off low energy emissions it is much less dangerous than a sample that decays a bit slower but emits higher energy radiation. The Geiger counter may make something seem like it is really "hot" and "dangerous", but in reality the energy being given off is incredibly small.

 

I recently came upon this website which is the first site I've ever seen that breaks down a samples radioactive decay by the energy level of the associated decay. I had always heard of Uranium-238 decaying and giving off alpha and gamma rays with a decay energy of 4.xx MeV which is a pretty damned high number. I did NOT know, however, that the gamma energy given off by the decay is amazingly low. The alpha particles have the high energy and the gamma rays given off are pretty low in energy. I must say that DV8 2XL is correct in that the leaded casing is a bit of overkill for the storage of a depleted uranium sample. :D

Posted

True, but (thinking from a kid's POV for a moment) nothing makes the dummies jump like waving the probe over a set of five nondescript rocks and having the counter roar near one of them.

Posted

*chuckles*

 

You can order small samples of uranium ore online. That will get the geiger counter hopping. You can also buy a container of potassium chloride "salt substitute" from the supermarket. That is also mildly radioactive. Remember, just making a geiger counter jump is easy--explaining why it is jumping is the hard part, and that is what is going to get you the grade.

 

How about researching radiometric dating? It's an interesting topic, in my opinion, and since it isn't as "sexy" as other topics--fission reactors and such--it would probably be a pleasant surprise for your instructor. It's especially nice because it is generally non-political.

 

-Caver

Posted
How about researching radiometric dating? It's an interesting topic, in my opinion, and since it isn't as "sexy" as other topics--fission reactors and such--it would probably be a pleasant surprise for your instructor. It's especially nice because it is generally non-political.Caver

 

I don't know about the non-political part. In some parochial schools it would be waving a red cape. The Earths only ~6000 yrs. old for some people - and they are not partial to evidence to the contrary. ;)

Posted
The mantles used in gas lamps are also radioactive. Thorium Oxide coatings?

 

 

Not the modern ones. They quit using thorium oxide back in the late 1970's I believe.

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