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The Geiger Counter
                                 Colin Hannesse and Frédéric Jacobs
                     With contributions from : Chloé Rousselle and Alexandre Jolly
                     With special thanks to : Loïc van Oldeneel and Luigi Siragusa


1     Physics notions
1.1    Radioactivity
                                       Radioactivity is a physical natural phenomenon in which an
                                       unstable nuclei is decaying by ejecting energy in different
                                       ways:
                                           • The Alpha ray (α)is the emission of an helium nucleus (2
                                             protons, 2 neutrons), mostly observed for heavy nuclei.
                                           • The Beta ray (β) is the emission of an electron or a
                                             positron.
                                           • The Gamma ray (γ) is observed in the two cases above.
                                             It is an electromagnetic wave (same nature as light).

                                       1.2    Isotopes
                                       Two atoms are called isotopes if they have both the same
                                       number of protons and a different number of neutrons.
                                       Example : The carbon-14, written 14C, is the isotope of the
                                                                          6
                                       carbon-12 (the carbon that is mostly found at the natural
                                       state, written 12C).
                                                       6


1.3    Irradiation and Contamination
    • An object is irradiated when it is hit by a ionizing ray. It doesn’t make it radioactive.
    • An object is contaminated when there are radioactive elements on it. The result is that the
      whole is radioactive (object + radioactive dust).

 Dosis in Sv (Sieverts)   Symptoms
           0,1            Treshold below which one never has found any effect of radiation on health.
           0,2            Threshold below we do not observe any symptoms..
           0,3            Small abnormalities on blood samples (less lymphocytes).
            1             First clinical symptoms (nausea, vomiting).
            2             Hospitalization necessary: bone marrow is affected (anemia, infections, bleeding).
            3             First signs on the skin(redness), hair loss.
           4,5            Lethal dose (50% mortality if untreated).
            8             Bowel are reached (diarrhea) and respiratory functions too.
                          Death follows after several days or weeks.
           10             Neurological symptoms (coma) followed by death in several days or weeks.

Sievert is a scale that marks the biological impact due to radiations.


                                                  1
2    The Electronic Components
The electronics of the Geiger counter is made out of 3 main parts. The transformer, the Geiger
tube and the signal stretcher.
                                                                 After having passed in the chop-
                                                             per, the current coming from the bat-
                                                             tery is transformed into alternating
                                                             current. Then, the transformer am-
                                                             plifies the voltage up to 400 Volts
                                                             that is needed by the Geiger tube
                                                             to work. This high voltage on the
                                                             electrodes allows the current passing
                                                             through the tube when a particle en-
                                                             ters the tube. This event lasts only
                                                             a few microseconds. If the signal was
                                                             directly converted to a flashlight or
                                                             sound, it would be to short to be seen
                                                             or heard. For that specific reason, we
                                                             added a signal stretcher that allows
                                                             the signal to be long enough to be
                                                             seen. Given that this is an digital cir-
                                                             cuit, this means the output is either
on or off and its state doesn’t depend on the intensity and speed of the particles.

The Geiger tube is made of a metallic tube filled with ionizable gas in which are placed two
electrodes.




    Above are represented the two different cases viewed from inside the Geiger tube.
    • When no particle enters the tube, no current can pass through the tube because the gas is
      not naturally conductive.
    • When a particle enters the tube, it is likely to grab electrons from the gas. This is called
      ionization and now the gas is conductive during a short moment. Therefore the current can
      pass through it.


                                                 2

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Building a Geiger Counter for iPhone

  • 1. The Geiger Counter Colin Hannesse and Frédéric Jacobs With contributions from : Chloé Rousselle and Alexandre Jolly With special thanks to : Loïc van Oldeneel and Luigi Siragusa 1 Physics notions 1.1 Radioactivity Radioactivity is a physical natural phenomenon in which an unstable nuclei is decaying by ejecting energy in different ways: • The Alpha ray (α)is the emission of an helium nucleus (2 protons, 2 neutrons), mostly observed for heavy nuclei. • The Beta ray (β) is the emission of an electron or a positron. • The Gamma ray (γ) is observed in the two cases above. It is an electromagnetic wave (same nature as light). 1.2 Isotopes Two atoms are called isotopes if they have both the same number of protons and a different number of neutrons. Example : The carbon-14, written 14C, is the isotope of the 6 carbon-12 (the carbon that is mostly found at the natural state, written 12C). 6 1.3 Irradiation and Contamination • An object is irradiated when it is hit by a ionizing ray. It doesn’t make it radioactive. • An object is contaminated when there are radioactive elements on it. The result is that the whole is radioactive (object + radioactive dust). Dosis in Sv (Sieverts) Symptoms 0,1 Treshold below which one never has found any effect of radiation on health. 0,2 Threshold below we do not observe any symptoms.. 0,3 Small abnormalities on blood samples (less lymphocytes). 1 First clinical symptoms (nausea, vomiting). 2 Hospitalization necessary: bone marrow is affected (anemia, infections, bleeding). 3 First signs on the skin(redness), hair loss. 4,5 Lethal dose (50% mortality if untreated). 8 Bowel are reached (diarrhea) and respiratory functions too. Death follows after several days or weeks. 10 Neurological symptoms (coma) followed by death in several days or weeks. Sievert is a scale that marks the biological impact due to radiations. 1
  • 2. 2 The Electronic Components The electronics of the Geiger counter is made out of 3 main parts. The transformer, the Geiger tube and the signal stretcher. After having passed in the chop- per, the current coming from the bat- tery is transformed into alternating current. Then, the transformer am- plifies the voltage up to 400 Volts that is needed by the Geiger tube to work. This high voltage on the electrodes allows the current passing through the tube when a particle en- ters the tube. This event lasts only a few microseconds. If the signal was directly converted to a flashlight or sound, it would be to short to be seen or heard. For that specific reason, we added a signal stretcher that allows the signal to be long enough to be seen. Given that this is an digital cir- cuit, this means the output is either on or off and its state doesn’t depend on the intensity and speed of the particles. The Geiger tube is made of a metallic tube filled with ionizable gas in which are placed two electrodes. Above are represented the two different cases viewed from inside the Geiger tube. • When no particle enters the tube, no current can pass through the tube because the gas is not naturally conductive. • When a particle enters the tube, it is likely to grab electrons from the gas. This is called ionization and now the gas is conductive during a short moment. Therefore the current can pass through it. 2