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Detector, Radiation, Geiger, Viking

Display Status:
This object is not on display at the National Air and Space Museum, it is either on loan or in storage.

Detector, Radiation, Geiger, Viking

 

  • Summary

Manufacturer:   Naval Research Laboratory

Country of Origin: United States of America

Dimensions:
3-D Test: 4.1 x 1.9cm (1 5/8 x 3/4 in.)

Materials:
Cover - aluminum Geiger tube - glass Tube - chrome iron

Experimental Geiger tube similar to those flown on Viking sounding rockets. The pillbox-like shape was designed to allow these detectors to be stacked and flown as an array. These counters comprise a gas filled tube with a outer cathode and a short wire anode in the middle, hidden by the opaque entrance window, probably aluminum, that was designed to filter out all radiation less energetic than x-rays. Photons of energetic radiation that enter the tube will ionize the filling gas making it electrically conductive. This will cause a discharge to flow bewteen the anode and the cathode. This results in a countable electrical signal. This artifact is part of a collection of high energy detectors from the Naval Research Laboratory (see Catalogue#s 19880001000-19880017000). It was transferred to NASM in 1987.

Transferred from the Naval Research Laboratory


Inventory number: A19880009000