The spinthariscope was invented by
William Crookes in 1903. While observing the apparently uniform
fluorescence on a
zinc sulfide screen created by the radioactive emissions (mostly
alpha radiation) of a sample of
radium bromide, he spilled some of the sample, and, owing to its extreme rarity and cost, he was eager to find and recover it. Upon inspecting the zinc sulfide screen under a
microscope, he noticed separate flashes of light created by individual
alpha particle collisions with the screen. Crookes took his discovery a step further and invented a device specifically intended to view these scintillations. It consisted of a small screen coated with zinc sulfide affixed to the end of a tube, with a tiny amount of
radium salt suspended a short distance from the screen and a lens on the other end of the tube for viewing the screen. Crookes named his device from () "spark". Crookes debuted the spinthariscope at a meeting of the
Royal Society, London on 15 May 1903. ==Toy spinthariscopes==