Author Topic: Mercury-198 Bulb  (Read 1602 times)
rjluna2
Member
*****
Offline

Gender: Male
View Posts
View Gallery

Robert


GoL
Mercury-198 Bulb « on: January 26, 2022, 05:08:01 PM » Author: rjluna2
I was going through one of the boxes from my collection and found this book: Units and Systems of Weights and Measures Their Origin, Development, and Present Status

I came across a photo of Willam F. Meggers looking though device from Mercury-198 bulb operating from radiofrequency (it has no electrodes) at page 9 of that book.
Logged

Pretty, please no more Chinese failure.

Medved
Member
*****
Offline

Gender: Male
View Posts
View Gallery

Re: Mercury-198 Bulb « Reply #1 on: January 29, 2022, 03:55:04 AM » Author: Medved
How the mercury content is maintained there, when the 180Hg has a halflife of barely 3 seconds?
Logged

No more selfballasted c***

rjluna2
Member
*****
Offline

Gender: Male
View Posts
View Gallery

Robert


GoL
Re: Mercury-198 Bulb « Reply #2 on: January 29, 2022, 12:21:56 PM » Author: rjluna2
Perhaps you can read better at https://cs.wikipedia.org/wiki/Izotopy_rtuti :)
Logged

Pretty, please no more Chinese failure.

Print 
© 2005-2024 Lighting-Gallery.net | SMF 2.0.19 | SMF © 2021, Simple Machines | Terms and Policies