Villard investigated the radiation emitted by
radium salts via a narrow aperture in a shielded container onto a photographic plate, through a thin layer of
lead that was known to stop
alpha rays. He was able to show that the remaining radiation consisted of a second and third type of rays. One of those was deflected by a magnetic field (as were the familiar "
canal rays") and could be identified with
Rutherford's beta rays. The last type was a very penetrating kind of radiation which had not been identified before. Villard was a modest man and he did not suggest a specific name for the type of radiation he had discovered. In 1903, it was
Ernest Rutherford who proposed to call Villard's rays
gamma rays because they were far more penetrating than the
alpha rays and
beta rays which he himself had already differentiated and named (in 1899) on the basis of their respective penetrating powers. The name stuck. == Later work ==