Page:Radio-activity.djvu/301

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Fig. 58. The emanation obtained from a few milligrams of radium bromide by solution or heating is condensed in the glass U tube T immersed in liquid air. This U tube is then put into connection with a larger glass tube V, in the upper part of which is placed a piece of zinc sulphide screen Z, and in the lower part of the tube a piece of the mineral willemite. The stop-cock A is closed and the U tube and the vessel V are partially exhausted by a pump through the stop-cock B. This lowering of the pressure causes a more rapid diffusion of the emanation when released. The emanation does not escape if the tube T is kept immersed in liquid air. The stop-cock B is then closed, and the liquid air removed. No luminosity of the screen or the willemite in the tube V is observed for several minutes, until the temperature of T rises above the point of volatilization of the emanation. The emanation is then rapidly carried into the vessel V, partly by expansion of the gas in the tube T with rising temperature, and partly by the process of diffusion. The screen Z and the willemite W are caused to phosphoresce brilliantly under the influence of the rays from the emanation surrounding them.

Fig. 58.

If the end of the vessel V is then plunged into liquid air, the emanation is again condensed in the lower end of the tube, and the willemite phosphoresces much more brightly than before. This is not due to an increase of the phosphorescence of willemite at the temperature of the liquid air, but to the effect of the rays from the emanation condensed around it. At the same time the luminosity of the zinc sulphide gradually diminishes, and practically disappears after several hours if the end of the tube is kept in the liquid air. If the tube is removed from the liquid air, the emanation again volatilizes and lights up the screen Z. The luminosity of the willemite returns to its original value after the lapse of several hours. This slow change of the luminosity of the zinc sulphide screen and of the willemite is due to the gradual