Radium is a Radioactive material that produces Alpha only
Rutherford used a lead box to shield against background radiation, which could interfere with his experiments on radioactivity. Lead is a dense material that effectively absorbs radiation, providing a protective barrier for sensitive equipment and preventing external radiation from influencing the results of his experiments.
it would totally explode! no just kidding. it would probably hurt you chemically if you did that considering that it has radium and neon. so just don't do it unless you ask like, a really good chemist or scientist or something. it could explode though.
Radioactive materials emit dangerous radiation; most of this will be blocked by a box of lead.
The apparatus needs to be enclosed in a lightproof box to prevent external light from affecting the experiment or the measurements being taken. Light can interfere with the results by causing inaccurate readings, especially in experiments that involve light-sensitive materials or reactions. Keeping the apparatus lightproof ensures that the experiment is conducted accurately and reliably.
Schrödinger's exp involved a cat placed inside a box w/ a vial of poisonous gas, released when an radioactive atom decays. Awnser by Jake Henderson
You have to read the information about this which I posted in the related links box below.
Rutherford used a lead box to shield against background radiation, which could interfere with his experiments on radioactivity. Lead is a dense material that effectively absorbs radiation, providing a protective barrier for sensitive equipment and preventing external radiation from influencing the results of his experiments.
It is an experiment to highlight how materials behave differently at a sub atomic level, otherwise called 'the measurement problem'. The experiment involves a radioactive material such as Radium, and linking it to a radiation detector which is in turn linked to a vile of cyanide. These items are placed in a large box along with a live domestic cat. The box lid is then shut with the cat inside. The idea is that when the radiation detector senses radiation given off by the Radium it will open the vile of cyanide which will kill the cat. It seems an obvious conclusion... but it isn't.Because of the way sub atomic particles move, it is never know for sure where they are until we measure them. It has been shown that they can be in two places at once. Therefore the radioactive particle, while in the shut box, has both jumped and not jumped into the detector at the same time. Therefore until we open the box to study the fate of the cat, it is both dead andalive at the same time .
The address of the Rutherford County Historical Society is: Po Box 906, Murfreesboro, TN 37133-0906
The address of the Rutherford County Historical Society is: Po Box 1863, Rutherfordton, NC 28139
The ring is in the lead box, which is inside the golden box.
Do the work in a ventilated box made for that sort of experiment.
it would totally explode! no just kidding. it would probably hurt you chemically if you did that considering that it has radium and neon. so just don't do it unless you ask like, a really good chemist or scientist or something. it could explode though.
The address of the B H Rutherford Yates Museum is: 1314 Andrews St, Houston, TX 77019
Radioactive materials emit dangerous radiation; most of this will be blocked by a box of lead.
Erwin Schrödinger created the famous "Schrödinger's Cat" thought experiment to illustrate the paradox of quantum superposition. In this experiment, a cat in a sealed box is both alive and dead at the same time until the box is opened and its state is observed.
In Schrdinger's thought experiment, the cat is considered to be both alive and dead until the box is opened and its state is observed.