New Reply

neutron source

 
Share Thread
Feb7-13, 01:00 PM   #1
 

neutron source


Greetings to all,
I know activity for a Am-Be neutron source. I want to compute strenght source in neutrons/s. Yours advices are welcome. Thank you!
PhysOrg.com science news on PhysOrg.com

>> City-life changes blackbird personalities, study shows
>> Origins of 'The Hoff' crab revealed (w/ Video)
>> Older males make better fathers: Mature male beetles work harder, care less about female infidelity
Feb9-13, 06:18 AM   #2
 
Admin
Quote by Stephan_doc View Post
Greetings to all,
I know activity for a Am-Be neutron source. I want to compute strenght source in neutrons/s. Yours advices are welcome. Thank you!
One could take the α decay rate of Am-241, and with knowledge of the macroscopic cross-section, including reaction efficiency, determine the n source term.

Alternatively, Amersham produces an Am-Be source of ~ 2.2 x 106 n/sec per Ci. This is the approximate value at manufacture, so one has to correct for Am-241 decay. One would have to know the Ci of Am of the original source, or the date of manufacture.
Feb28-13, 02:15 PM   #3
 
Thank you for answer, finally i found the solution. For example Po-210/Be neutrons-source has a yield of 70 neutrons/1milion alpha particles.
Mar19-13, 10:54 PM   #4
 

neutron source


You need a conversion factor. Look at

Bernard Shlein, L. A. (1998). Handbook of Health Physics and Radiological Health Third Edition. Baltimore: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins.

Quote by Stephan_doc View Post
Greetings to all,
I know activity for a Am-Be neutron source. I want to compute strenght source in neutrons/s. Yours advices are welcome. Thank you!
New Reply

Similar discussions for: neutron source
Thread Forum Replies
Source of magnetic field of Neutron stars. Astrophysics 2
Where is Neutron source? Nuclear Engineering 4
How to calculate radiation dose from neutron source. High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics 6
Dose of radiation from the neutron source Introductory Physics Homework 1
Neutron Decay, Electrical Source? General Physics 3