Page:Radio-activity.djvu/180

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scintillations are best shown with a zinc sulphide screen; but are also observed with willemite (zinc silicate), powdered diamond, and potassium platinocyanide (Glew, loc. cit.). If a screen of barium platinocyanide is exposed to the [Greek: alpha] rays from radium, the scintillations are difficult to observe, and the luminosity is far more persistent than for a zinc sulphide screen exposed under the same conditions. The duration of the phosphorescence in this case probably accounts for the absence of visible scintillations.

There can be no doubt that the scintillations result from the continuous bombardment of the sensitive screen by the [Greek: alpha] particles. Each of these particles moves with enormous velocity, and has a considerable energy of motion. On account of the ease with which these particles are stopped, most of this energy is given up at the surface of the screen, and a portion of the energy is in some way transformed into light. Zinc sulphide is very sensitive to mechanical shocks. Luminosity is observed if a penknife is drawn across the screen, or if a current of air is directed on to the screen. The disturbance effected by the impact of the [Greek: alpha] particle extends over a distance very large compared with the size of the impinging particle, so that the spots of light produced have an appreciable area. Recently Becquerel[1] has made an examination of the scintillations produced by different substances, and has concluded that the scintillations are due to irregular cleavages in the crystals composing the screen, produced by the action of the [Greek: alpha] rays. Scintillations can be mechanically produced by crushing a crystal. Tommasina[2] found that a zinc sulphide screen removed from the action of the radium rays for several days, showed the scintillations again when an electrified rod was brought near it.

The number of scintillations produced in zinc sulphide depends upon the presence of a slight amount of impurity and on its crystalline state. It can be shown that even with the most sensitive zinc sulphide screens, the number of scintillations is probably only a small fraction of the total number of [Greek: alpha] particles which fall upon it. It would appear that the crystals are in some way altered by the bombardment of the [Greek: alpha] particles, and that some of the crystals occasionally break up with emission of light[3].

  1. Becquerel, C. R. 137, Oct. 27, 1903.
  2. Tommasina, C. R. 137, Nov. 9, 1903.
  3. An interesting side-light is thrown on this question by the experiments described in Appendix A of this book.