Page:Radio-activity.djvu/546

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atmosphere is due mainly to the diffusion of emanations from the soil into the air above it.

The rare gases helium and xenon which exist in the atmosphere have been tested and found to be non-radio-active. The radio-activity of the air cannot be ascribed to a slight radio-activity possessed by either of these gases.


281. Amount of the radium emanation in the atmosphere. It is a matter of great interest to form an estimate of the amount of radium emanation present in the atmosphere, for since it comes from the earth, it indirectly serves as a means of estimating the amount of radium which is distributed over a thin crust of the earth.

Some experiments in this direction have been made by Eve in the laboratory of the writer. The experiments are not yet completed but the results so far obtained allow us to calculate the probable amount of emanation per cubic kilometre of the atmosphere near the earth.

Experiments were first made with a large iron tank 154 cms. square and 730 cms. deep, in a building in which no radium or other radio-active material had ever been introduced. The saturation ionization current for the air in the tank was first measured by means of an electroscope, connected with an insulated electrode passing up the centre of the closed tank. Assuming that the ionization in the tank was uniform, the number of ions produced per c.c. of the air in the tank was found to be 10. This is a considerably lower value than has usually been observed in a small closed vessel (see section 284). Cooke obtained the value 10 for a well cleaned brass electroscope, surrounded by lead, while Schuster obtained a value about 12 for the air in the laboratory of Owens College, Manchester.

In order to measure the amount of the excited activity from the tank, a central insulated wire was charged negatively to about 10,000 volts by a Wimshurst machine. After two hours, the wire was removed and wound on an insulated frame connected with a gold-leaf electroscope. The rate of decay of the activity on the wire was found to be about the same as for the excited activity produced by the radium emanation. In order to estimate the amount of