A sea of sparks: Seeing radioactivity

(maurycyz.com)

40 points | by maurycyz 4 hours ago

5 comments

  • cbm-vic-20 2 hours ago
    Don't miss a chance to see the Cherenkov radiation effect at your local research reactor.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherenkov_radiation

  • r2_pilot 2 hours ago
    If you haven't experienced a spinthariscope, I can highly recommend it. I bought one as a Christmas present for a buddy and we both enjoy its demonstration of radioactivity.
    • jcims 22 minutes ago
      UnitedNuclear has these and a bunch of other interesting tidbits if anyone wants to give it a try. I bought a small bottle of heavy water as well, which I of course sampled and can confirm it has a slightly sweet taste to it.

      You really have to get your eyes adjusted to the dark to see anything with the spinthariscope. It ends up looking mostly like static on a green crt, but if your only reference frame is a cloud chamber, the volume of particles that are emitted from such a weak source is pretty remarkable.

  • lukasschwab 2 hours ago
    You won't make one at home, but cloud chambers[^1] reveal individual alpha particle tracks.

    There's one in the Musée des Arts et Métiers in Paris — blew my mind!

    [^1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_chamber

    Edit: turns out people make these at home all the time. Sick!

    • Yenrabbit 2 hours ago
      You can easily make them at home (source, I did last weekend!).

      - Dry ice (mine came from something shipped cold)

      - Dark piece of metal (I used a 3D printer hot bed) on top of dry ice to get cold

      - IPA vapour (I poured some on a shop towel)

      - Some transparent container to house it all - I found a glass display cube on the side of the road, fish tanks or Tupperware also work.

      - Torch or something to provide side lighting

      Very cool to see evidence of the particles zooming around us, can highly recommend.

    • alnwlsn 2 hours ago
      This can be done at home with a little effort. Less effort if you can get dry ice easily.

      https://hackaday.com/2019/01/13/see-the-radioactive-world-wi...

    • lukan 2 hours ago
      Well, google for "DIY cloud chamber" did result in quite some entries. Apart from youtube channels, with the first entry a guide from CERN:

      https://home.cern/news/news/experiments/how-make-your-own-cl...

  • anfractuosity 1 hour ago
    https://dberard.com/home-built-stm/ shows individual atoms.
  • dvh 3 hours ago
    I tried the same with bananas. Got nothing.
    • thadt 2 hours ago
      Bananas are like XML that way. If you're not getting the results you want, you're just not using enough of them.
    • kergonath 3 hours ago
      Potassium-40 is not an alpha emitter.
      • fecal_henge 3 hours ago
        Maybe he used banana as the scintillator.
      • DetroitThrow 3 hours ago
        That's unrelated. He's been diligently substituting bananas in many experiments to mostly disappointment.
        • marginalia_nu 1 hour ago
          The banhattan project has been a fiasco.

          Chicago Peel 1 accomplished fission of fruit flies, which we felt was promising.

          The subsequent banana nuclear bomb tests have been an unmitigated disaster. There are so many damn bananas in and around the bikini atolls, just nothing. Not even a fizzle. Mojave is littered with peels. Oppenheimer slipped and broke his leg.

          Rumors are the Soviets are using avocados. Maybe that is the key. We are now constructing a demon core from an avocado split lengthwise.

          • selimthegrim 46 minutes ago
            This puts Raffi in a whole new light. Also maybe the Banana ball team are refugee all-stars.
        • onraglanroad 1 hour ago
          ...but occasional delight.