Attempts were made to see whether a radio-active emanation was given off by dissolving solid substances and then keeping the solutions in a closed vessel and afterwards testing the activity of the air drawn from them. In some cases an emanation was observed, but the amount varied with different specimens of the same material; in others no effect was detected.
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Fig. 105.
When linings of different substances were placed in a closed testing vessel, the ionization current in most cases fell at first, passed through a minimum, and then slowly increased to a maximum. For lead the maximum was reached in 9 hours, for tin in 14 and for zinc in 18 hours. These results indicate that an emanation is given off from the metal, and that the amount reaches a maximum value at different intervals in the various cases. This was confirmed by an examination of a piece of lead which was left