Page:Radio-activity.djvu/459

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

CHAPTER XIII.

RADIO-ACTIVE PROCESSES.


254. Theories of radio-activity. In previous chapters, a detailed account has been given of the nature and properties of the radiations, and of the complex processes taking place in the radio-active substances. The numerous products arising from the radio-elements have been closely examined, and have been shown to result from a transformation of the parent element through a number of well-marked stages. In this chapter, the application of the disintegration theory to the explanation of radio-active phenomena will be considered still further, and the logical deductions to be drawn from the theory will be discussed briefly.

A review will first be given of the working hypotheses which have served as a guide to the investigators in the field of radio-activity. These working theories have in many cases been modified or extended with the growth of experimental knowledge.

The early experiments of Mme Curie had indicated that radio-activity was an atomic and not a molecular phenomenon. This was still further substantiated by later work, and the detection and isolation of radium from pitchblende was a brilliant verification of the truth of this hypothesis.

The discovery that the β rays of the radio-elements were similar to the cathode rays produced in a vacuum tube was an important advance, and has formed the basis of several subsequent theories. J. Perrin[1], in 1901, following the views of J. J. Thomson and others, suggested that the atoms of bodies consisted of parts and might be likened to a miniature planetary system. In the

  1. Perrin, Revue Scientifique, April 13, 1901.