light being emitted from a
TRIGA reactor pool is due to high-speed beta particles traveling faster than the speed of light (
phase velocity) in water (which is 75% of the speed of light in vacuum).Of the three common types of radiation given off by radioactive materials,
alpha, beta and
gamma, beta has the medium penetrating power and the medium ionising power. Although the beta particles given off by different radioactive materials vary in energy, most beta particles can be stopped by a few millimeters of
aluminium. However, this does not mean that beta-emitting isotopes can be completely shielded by such thin shields: as they decelerate in matter, beta electrons emit secondary gamma rays, which are more penetrating than betas per se. Shielding composed of materials with lower atomic weight generates gammas with lower energy, making such shields somewhat more effective per unit mass than ones made of larger atoms such as lead. Being composed of charged particles, beta radiation is more strongly ionizing than gamma radiation. When passing through matter, a beta particle is decelerated by electromagnetic interactions and may give off
bremsstrahlung X-rays. In water, beta radiation from many
nuclear fission products typically exceeds the speed of light in that material (which is about 75% that of light in vacuum), and thus generates blue
Cherenkov radiation when it passes through water. The intense beta radiation from the fuel rods of
swimming pool reactors can thus be visualized through the transparent water that covers and shields the reactor (see illustration at right).
Detection and measurement (after insertion of an artificial source
strontium-90) The ionizing or excitation effects of beta particles on matter are the fundamental processes by which radiometric detection instruments detect and measure beta radiation. The ionization of gas is used in
ion chambers and
Geiger–Müller counters, and the excitation of
scintillators is used in
scintillation counters. The following table shows radiation quantities in SI and non-SI units: • The
gray (Gy) is the SI unit of
absorbed dose, which is the amount of radiation energy deposited in the irradiated material. For beta radiation this is numerically equal to the
equivalent dose measured by the
sievert, which indicates the stochastic biological effect of low levels of radiation on human tissue. The radiation weighting conversion factor from absorbed dose to equivalent dose is 1 for beta, whereas alpha particles have a factor of 20, reflecting their greater ionising effect on tissue. • The
rad is the deprecated
CGS unit for absorbed dose and the
rem is the deprecated
CGS unit of equivalent dose, used mainly in the USA.
Beta spectroscopy The energy contained within individual beta particles is measured via
beta spectrometry; the study of the obtained distribution of energies as a
spectrum is
beta spectroscopy. Determination of this energy is done by measuring the amount of deflection of the electron's path under a magnetic field. == Applications ==