Page:Radio-activity.djvu/51

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CHAPTER II.

IONIZATION THEORY OF GASES..


25. Ionization of gases by radiation. The most important property possessed by the radiations from radio-active bodies is their power of discharging bodies whether positively or negatively electrified. As this property has been made the basis of a method for an accurate quantitative analysis and comparison of the radiations, the variation of the rate of discharge under different conditions and the processes underlying it will be considered in some detail.

In order to explain the similar discharging power of Röntgen rays, the theory[1] has been put forward that the rays produce positively and negatively charged carriers throughout the volume of the gas surrounding the charged body, and that the rate of production is proportional to the intensity of the radiation. These carriers, or ions[2] as they have been termed, move with a uniform velocity through the gas under a constant electric field, and their velocity varies directly as the strength of the field.

Fig. 1.

Suppose we have a gas between two metal plates A and B (Fig. 1) exposed to the radiation, and that the plates are kept at a constant difference of potential. A definite number of ions will be produced per second by the radiation, and the number

  1. J. J. Thomson and Rutherford, Phil. Mag. Nov. 1896.
  2. The word ion has now been generally adopted in the literature of the subject. In using this word, it is not assumed that the ions in gases are the same as the corresponding ions in the electrolysis of solutions.