[ RadSafe ] Fwd: Beat phenomena and health physics
JPreisig at aol.com
JPreisig at aol.com
Sun Feb 22 22:07:11 CST 2015
Radsafe,
I guess it is Co-60 that has the closely spaced peaks.
Joe Preisig
____________________________________
From: JPreisig at aol.com
To: radsafe at health.phys.iit.edu
Sent: 2/22/2015 10:56:38 P.M. Eastern Standard Time
Subj: Beat phenomena and health physics
Dear Radsafe,
The phenomena of beats (see your undergraduate text in
physics/mechanics) involves what happens when 2 or more fundamental frequencies of a
system are close in frequency (or Energy) to one another. Two such sinusoidal
signals (or more) produce sum and difference frequencies, which can be
important in problems.
I've been discussing beats concerning the fundamental wobble
frequencies. I also said something perhaps about beats and the Sodium doublet.
Another situation where beats might be important is in health physics
and perhaps even physics. We Health Physicists measure gamma and other
spectra using a MultiChannel Analyzer and similar equipment. There may be
times when our gamma spectra have peaks that are close to one another and may
produce beat (sum and difference frequency) peaks. Do we observe such
peaks in our spectra??? Will these beat phenomena affect our physics
results??? Quite possibly. These extra peaks may affect spectral stripping and
other results.
Remember, E = h x nu, where nu is the frequency in atomic and/or
nuclear physics.
Perhaps physicists doing sensitive experiments account for such beat
phenomena. I don't remember hearing about beat phenomena in my Health
Physics courses. I first heard about beat phenomena in a physics course or
two. Then I heard about it again in geophysics research.
Beat phenomena might affect our every day Health Physics work??? Oh
my.
I seem to remember Cesium-137 having closely spaced decay (energy)
gamma peaks.???
Regards, Joe Preisig
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