roy2009 said:
Out of curiosity-what might happen if one of these devices did in fact touch my lap or come into contact with my clothing?
You'd absorb a little bit of radiation, the amount in proportion to how long you held the gizmo in your lap. Clearly , from the picture you posted, the gizmo is safe enough to be handled. The source inside it is sealed up so it won't transfer its radioactive contents to your clothes. The ones I've seen come with a heavy lead shielded carrying case that the source goes back into after each use.
The radiation it emits is not like germs that stick to clothes or skin, it's more like light present only in proximity to the source.
roy2009 said:
Would I need to throw the clothes out as I have been doing (even though probably only imagined and not necessary)?
Not unless the source was physically broken open so its contents could leak out.
Do you also obsess over dental and medical X-rays ?
Best cure for fear of the unknown is to make the subject no longer unknown.
for starters I suggest looking up the terms
erg
Rad
Roentgen Equivalent Man
Boring Anecdote
Realize also that today's radiation detectors are incredibly sensitive.
I worked in a nuke plant. Every workday we exited the gate via walk-through radiation scanners. After my heart stress tests where the heart doctors inject a mildly radioactive muscle tracer Technicium, i set off those scanners when i got within fifty feet of the exit gate. So i had to wait until after shift change so as to not disrupt orderly exit of my co-workers. I felt perfectly normal , no burning no sickness no fatigue. Our health physics guy measured me and said i was less than 2 millirems per hour on contact, easily measured but far from dangerous. A few thousand times that would be dangerous.
Point being living tissue is far less sensitive to radiation than the fearmongers would have you believe. Anything dangerous to humans will overload most radiation detectors. That i pegged our exit portal scanners is a testament to their sensitivity.
So if you're working around those pavement thickness gauges just respect the source they use.
As with any other creature respect and avoid its bite. Keep it in its cage when not in use .
best cure for fear is understanding. Do some reading.
... my two cents (and that's overpriced)
old jim