CHAPTER 3

RESULTS
3.1

GENERAL

Documentation of fallout included:(1) surveying of fallout

samples and the areas from whence they came; (2) studying decays (3)

extrapolating the beta activity results to estimated activities at

sampling time, and (4) studying the activity per unit weight or volum,

energies, particle size, and particle characteristics of the radioactive fallout.
322

BETA COUNTING EQUIPMENT, TECHNIQUES, AND CORRECTION

The glass counting cups were removed from the trays, externally
decontaminated and counted by Tracerlab G-M tubes with window thick=
nesses of less than 2 mg/cm@. The tubes were mounted in vertical lead
shields, Technical Associates Model AL14 A,having a wall thickness of

2~ine lead, 0.25-in. brass, and 0.25-in. aluminum.

A geometry-defin-

ing brass plate was inserted between the G-M tube and the sample.4/

The output of the tubes was fed into Atomic Scalers Model 1060 having a
characteristic resolving time of 5 microseconds.
The samples in glass cups were counted for beta activity in the

following manners samples with activities greater than 1000 cpm were
counted for 10,000 counts, samples with activities less than 1000 cpm
were counted for 10 min. Each sample was counted twice; in cases where
the two counts did not agree within one standard deviation,a third
count was taken and the three counts avoragede

It was necessary to apply several corrections in order to ap=

proximate the disintegration rate of the samples. The method mst
commonly used to obtain the disintegration rate of a sample is to
compare the sample under consideration with a known source counted in

an identical manner. Yowever, there is no one known source which
represents mixed fission products. The procedure used here evaluates
the various correction factors in terms of the sample itself and thus

avoids the errors associated with a direct comparison with a singleisotope standard. The procedure is as follows:

1.

The raw cpm were corrected for coincidence loss._5/
34

Select target paragraph3