Radioactive sources: if you're interested in thorium, it can be found in Coleman lantern mantles: the little cloth bags you tie over the apertures in the lantern where the flame appears. These are apparently saturated with the stuff. I got the word from an engineer at a nuclear plant some years ago, and was able to verify it at least partially: a geiger counter held next to Coleman lantern mantles at the store got a very clear reading in the range of 20mR/hr. The counter I was using was not sensitive to alphas, so I presume it was getting betas. The thorium in the lantern mantles could presumably be extracted with hydrochloric acid or by some other means. Clearly not for the amateur, but something which could be done in a lab with appropriate precautions. -gg
Yes, you can get Thorium from lamp nets. A simpler way is to get it from welding rods. They are 40% thorium. More than one unsespecting lab technician has welded together an ultrasensitive detector with them, only to find it not working for some reason <grin> -- Vercotti: I was terrified of him. Everyone was terrified of Doug. I've seen grown men pull their own heads off rather than see Doug. Even Dinsdale was frightened of Doug. Interviewer: What did he do? Vercotti: He used sarcasm. He knew all the tricks, dramatic irony, metaphor, bathos, puns, parody, litotes and satire. -- Monty Python, Episode 14 PGP 2.1 Key by finger
participants (2)
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Douglas Sinclair
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George A. Gleason