Page:Radio-activity.djvu/548

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These results lead indirectly to the conclusion that a large amount of emanation does undoubtedly exist in the surface crust of the earth.

Experiments were also made by Eve with a large zinc cylinder exposed in the open air. Volume for volume, the average amount of excited activity derived from it was only about one-third of that obtained from the large iron tank. This would reduce the amount of emanation, previously deduced, to about one-third.

Before such calculations can be considered at all definite, it will be necessary to make comparative measurements of the amount of emanation in the atmosphere at various parts of the earth. The air at Montreal is not abnormally active, so that the calculations probably give the right order of magnitude of the quantities.

Eve also observed that the amount of activity to be obtained per unit length of the wire in the zinc cylinder of about 70 cms. in diameter was about the same as for a wire ·5 mms. in diameter charged to 10,000 volts in the open air, supported 20 feet from the ground. This shows that such a potential does not draw in the carriers of excited activity which are more than half a metre away, and probably the range is even less.

It is of great importance to find how large a proportion of the number of ions produced in the atmosphere is due to the radio-active matter distributed throughout it. The results of Eve with the large iron tank, already referred to, indicate that a large proportion of the ionization in the tank was due to the radio-active matter contained in it, for the ratio of the excited activity on the central electrode to the total ionization current in the tank was about 7/10 of the corresponding ratio for a smaller tank into which a supply of the radium emanation had been introduced.

This result requires confirmation by experiments at other parts of the earth, but the results point to the conclusion that a large part, if not all, of the ionization at the earth's surface is due to radio-active matter distributed in the atmosphere. A constant rate of production of 30 ions per second per c.c. of air, which has been observed in the open air at the surface of the earth in various localities, would be produced by the presence in each c.c. of the air of the amount of emanation liberated from 2·4 × 10^{-15} grams of radium bromide in radio-active equilibrium. It is not likely,