Detection of dead body in insulation

AI Thread Summary
Detecting a dead rat in insulation can be challenging due to heat reflection from the insulation, complicating thermal imaging methods. While electronic noses for gas detection are costly, simpler methods include using trained animals to detect odors or inspecting for holes in the insulation. Advanced imaging techniques like X-rays, neutrons, and NMR could potentially identify a rat's presence by revealing differences in chemical composition or hydrogen content. NMR, in particular, may help locate a rat-shaped structure if the insulation is movable. Overall, a combination of traditional and advanced methods may yield the best results in such scenarios.
Thundagere
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Strange title? Basically, a few days ago we got a dead rat in our ceiling, which is covered in insulation. Took a while to find it, but it got me thinking, how would you detect a dead rat body?
If it recently died, I first thought you could use thermal imaging (aside from the expensive aspect), but then I realized that the insulation would reflect the heat of the body and make it difficult to pinpoint. Trying to track gases with some sort of electronic nose is pretty expensive and difficult. ANy ideas on this? It's not really something important, but I was just wondering.
 
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from the smell
 
Without special equipment?
Find some animal which can detect the smell (dogs, humans, ...).
Find holes in the insulation and follow them.

With special equipment?
X-rays, neutrons, NMR, basically every imaging technique which allows to give some sort of contrast.
 
Could you give me some background info on how NMR would work?
 
If parts of the insulation are not too big and movable, put them in a scanner and try to find deviations in the images. I would expect that rats have a different amount of hydrogen in their body, and a different chemical composition. If some rat-shaped structure appears, you found the rat.
For the physics of NMR, see wikipedia, books or whatever.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks

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