I can sympathize with this woman's experience. Way back in graduate school I used an experimental technique called neutron scattering. One takes a nuclear reactor with a tiny opening that allows neutrons through. Slow the neutrons down, collimate them and filter them to one wavelength. The neutrons pass through a sample and the scattering pattern they produce contains information about the microstructure of the sample. It is one of the coolest techniques I know of in science and was a lot of fun to use in my research.
As you might imagine, there are many important radiation safety rules. You must pass through radiation detectors to enter and leave the room where the experiments are performed to make sure that no radioactive material leaves the room for safety reasons. The detectors start by stepping in them or when they detect any radiation, this last property was the source of the fun.
![](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/6674/1214/200/3g01_mr_burns.jpg)
tags: science, radiation, neutron
Hey Bro,
ReplyDeleteMr. Burns (from "The Simpsons") was a great touch to this article, in getting your point across. I have to say, that was one of my favorite episodes...but you left out the "throat scraping" (hee, hee)...I guess that would have been a little off topic.
Love ya, Bex.