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Rouser's thought processes

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SteveGrenard said:
I never heard of homeopathic water being irradiated anyway. Have you?
If you don't know what this is all about, it would help to read the passage from the 22nd August 2003 Commentary which started it all.
This item, they tell us, appeared on a website with timely advice for anyone traveling with homeopathic remedies:

"Try not to put homeopathic remedies through airport security x-rays as it will render their healing properties less effective." You should also "pack them well away from strong-smelling substances, i.e. essential oils, perfume, after-shave, toothpaste etc."

But this gives us a really simplified way of designing and carrying out a test of these materials! It's been tricky working out how to perform this simple inquiry: can the applicant differentiate between homeopathic and non-homeopathic materials? We'll accept positive results and the determination can be done by any means: chemical, physical, optical, biological (in vivo or in vitro), using infrared, ultraviolet, polarized, high-intensity, or pulsed light, conductivity or electrochemical means, Tarot cards, or a crystal ball. Now, in view of this newest technological breakthrough — which says that x-rays will lessen the homeopathic qualities — and assuming that a very heavy dose of x-ray treatment would effectively cancel out any such qualities — I propose that a control batch of water (bottles of already-packaged product, exposed to heavy x-rays) be mixed with non-radiated samples, and presented to an applicant, to be sorted out.
The part of this which states the basic challenge ("can the applicant differentiate between homeopathic and non-homeopathic materials?") was quoted to Rouser when he refused to believe that this ability was actually covered by the Challenge.

He latched on to the x-ray scanner part of it, and replied,
Well then, if non-radiated samples are to be mixed with radiated samples then the radiated samples would have more radiation than the non-radiated samples, presumeably detectable with a radiation detection device.
Now this simply evades the point completely, the more so since I just this minute noticed the very last sentence from the Commentary article:
Yes, I thought of the possible residual radiation. There are ways around that….
Which shows that Randi saw this as a conceivable loophole which he would ensure was closed.

However, the question as to whether everyday materials such as glass, water, sugar, leather and so on would become x-ray emitters under any conceivable doses of x-rays (or even become radioactive in any way at all) is still at issue, thanks to Rouser. Just because Mr. Randi thought it was worth considering, certainly isn't proof that it could or would happen.

Anyone here which a good physics degree clear this up once and for all?

Rolfe.
 
Darat said:
JJ/Rofle/wayrad et all

Please don't be angry but I have found evidence that you are totally wrong and I suspect this is where Rouser found his evidence as well.

Irradiation & Gamma rays
:dl:

You got me there! I really thought you'd found something! Aaaaggghh!

Edited to add: I see jj got there way first!

Rolfe.
 
SteveGrenard said:
Steve seems to be implying that if you really whacked the afotementioned bottle of homoeopathic nothingness with an eye-popping dose, you might cause some chemical change. I don't know if he's right or not. But I'm pretty confident that whatever that change might be, it wouldn't turn said bottle of medical fraud into an x-ray emitter.
I am sorry but I do not recall implying or saying the above. If you think I was implying it, please note I was not. The point of my diversion was that substances can be irradiated and as a result become radioactive with very high doses of radiation including by X-Rays. My left shoe during my visit to Brookhaven is an example. And no, contrary to what someone else said, I did not pick up any radioactive particles of dust or whatever. The bottom of my left shoe happened to be in the path of a beam of radiation and as a result become irradiated and radioactive.
Steve, that is exactly what you implied. You are stating that the actual material of your shoe became radioactive, rather than becoming contaminated with a radioactive isotope. Thus you are saying that the material of your shoe was transformed into a radioactive isotope. That is, it was chemically changed (well, nuclearly changed, if that's the right term, which it isn't, but you know what I mean).

(Remembering more from the medical physics courses now, got a distinction, but it was 30 years ago so maybe they found more colours of kryptonite I didn't know about....)

This is completely nuts! Anything that might do that to leather would make Hiroshima look like a vicarage tea-party.

Edited to add: Of course, the passage highlighted by BillHoyt.....
Anyway I had to give up my shoes to a technician who then washed off the radiation with borax and water and then I got my shoes back.
.... completely proves utterly and certainly that what happened was that you picked up the radiation equivalent of a dog turd on your shoe, and it was safely washed off.

Sheesh, I must remember that Steve understands substantially less science than he'd like us to believe. And if ever we need that demonstrated, this lot has done a splendid job.

Rolfe
 
BillHoyt said:


I stand corrected, Darat. I didn't think anyone would invoke such a high authority as Professor S. Lee. My apologies, Steve, Rouser.
Does this mean that Steve now "finds himself transformed in times of stress into the dark personification of his repressed rage and fury"? Or maybe just his left shoe?
 
OK, thank you Steve. By demonstrating such utter sincerity in holding a completely daft belief pretty much identical to Rouser's, you have convinced me that it is possible to be this stupid, really.

Steve actually thought about it at a level Rouser didn't even attempt, and had the obvious solution (the contamination washed off) right there to hand, and had it all explained to him quite sensibly, and it's obvious he wasn't just trolling.... BUT HE STILL DIDN'T GET IT.

So what hope had Rouser, really?

Rolfe.
 
Hmm so Rolfe, you are saying the radiation physics technician did not wash off the radiation on my shoe? And I was
hallucinating. Thanks for that. I suyggest you begin by starting to read all he health physicsts manuals and procedures you can find and get back to us.

Insofar as to what Rouser was probably referring to, and to which you were implying that I was implying, you probably were referring to the following description:


Tony Webb, Tim Lang and the London Food Commission, Food Irradiation - The myth and the reality rev ed. Thorsons, Wellingborough, UK 1990

Page 23: 'When radiation strikes a material it transfers some of its energy. This energy transfer can cause the atoms and molecules to vibrate more rapidly. This results in heating, for example, of matter lying in the sunshine or cooking with a microwave oven. At a certain point on the energy spectrum, however, the radiation has sufficient energy to alter the atomic structure of the material it strikes. Molecules can break apart and recombine to form new and different materials. The process involves knocking electrons out of their orbit around the nucleus of the atom, leaving positively and negatively charged particles called 'ions'. Above this energy level the radiation is called 'ionising' radiation. The ions and what are called 'free radicals' -uncharged, highly reactive, single atoms or part of molecules - are chemically very active. They can initiate a wide range of chemical reactions which can alter the chemical structure of the irradiated material.'
 
SteveGrenard said:
Hmm so Rolfe, you are saying the radiation physics technician did not wash off the radiation on my shoe? And I was
hallucinating. Thanks for that. I suyggest you begin by starting to read all he health physicsts manuals and procedures you can find and get back to us.

Now I must know how Interesting Ian feels sometimes.

Steve, please. Nobody is doubting that somebody WIPED THE RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL OFF YOUR SHOE.

However, your shoe did NOT become radioactive because it was exposed to ?-rays, you STEPPED IN SOMETHING THAT HAD A RADIOISOTOPE IN IT. That was material that emitted radioactivity that was STUCK to your shoe. That was wiped off. So it was gone. Even if it was an alpha emitter, it's highly unlikely that it was there long enough to get anything in your shoe going. Light elements tend to be very unstable except in the stable isotopic form, as well, so a light element "off by 4, meaning 2p, 2n" would typically decay in nothing flat.

Were it your SHOE that became radioactive, wiping it WOULD HAVE DONE NO GOOD. The material of your SHOE, then, would emit radiation, and wiping it would do jack. If it was your shoe that was radioactive, not something stuck to it, they would have taken it, and YOU would have taken a trip to the clinic to make sure of YOUR condition. It would take exposure to particles, not photons, typically, to make your shoe radioactive, and that would have meant YOU were exposed rather nastily, too, which I'm quite glad you weren't.
 
1. Our group was issued protective shoe covers. These were taken from us when we left the hot area.

2. The bottom of my shoe was radioactive This was inside the booty. It was scrubbed with Borax soapy water. My socks were also contaminated so these were kept (I had to go home w/o socks).

I was also required to scrub my feet with the same solution they used on the shoe.
Fortunately I got to keep my left shoe and foot.

When I walked through the whole body thingie and it registered a problem I was gone over from head to foot with a hand held device which discovered the radiation on my protective covers, my shoe, my socks and my foot.

Yes I am sure it was something nasty but the health physicist was satisifed that they had sucessfully washed it off my shoe and my foot; there was no convenient way of doing so for my socks. If you visit the above cited safety site for working with radiation at Princeton, or any other for that matter, it appears that this is standard operating procedure in such a case.



--------------------------------------------------

Source: Prepared Statement of Dr. Henry C. Kelly, President, Federation of American Scientists. To Senate Foreign Relations Committee. March 6, 2002.


Radioactive sources that emit intense gamma-rays, such as cobalt-60 and cesium-137, are useful in killing bacteria and cancer cells. Gamma-rays, like X-rays, can penetrate clothing, skin, and other materials, but they are more energetic and destructive. When these rays reach targeted cells, they cause lethal chemical changes inside the cell.

Gamma rays pose two types of health risks. Intense sources of gamma rays can cause immediate tissue damage, and lead to acute radiation poisoning. Fatalities can result from very high doses. Long-term exposure to low levels of gamma rays can also be harmful because it can cause genetic mutations leading to cancer. Triggering cancer is largely a matter of chance: the more radiation you're exposed to, the more often the dice are rolled. The risk is never zero since we are all constantly being bombarded by large amounts of gamma radiation produced by cosmic rays, which reach us from distant stars.
 
SteveGrenard said:
I was also required to scrub my feet with the same solution they used on the shoe.
Fortunately I got to keep my left shoe and foot.

Ahh. You stepped into something that got on your sock, Steve. Or it splashed on you, or something. Since you were apparently unaware of what it was, I'm obviously not going to pick that out.

It wasn't some kind of x-ray or something, it was a material substance. Since the sock absorbs, it went to a dump. The shoe didn't absorb much, apparently, so it was ok. Your foot you get to keep :) which is good.

Your quote on gamma radiation doesn't show that it makes something else radioactive, by the way, it simply shows that gamma radiation (which is photons, not matter particles) has chemical effects, (as opposed to nuclear effects) which is something I think we agree on.

And exposure to much is, indeed, bad.

Any photon that is "ionizing" to any serious extent can cause tissue damage. If it hits the right thing, which is purely a question of chance, it can cause very serious problems. Since we grew up in a mildly radioactive environment, our systems compensate pretty well, but not perfectly.
 
SteveGrenard said:
1. Our group was issued protective shoe covers. These were taken from us when we left the hot area.

2. The bottom of my shoe was radioactive This was inside the booty. It was scrubbed with Borax soapy water. My socks were also contaminated so these were kept (I had to go home w/o socks).

I was also required to scrub my feet with the same solution they used on the shoe.
Fortunately I got to keep my left shoe and foot.

When I walked through the whole body thingie and it registered a problem I was gone over from head to foot with a hand held device which discovered the radiation on my protective covers, my shoe, my socks and my foot.
OK, you either had something fall down inside your shoe cover, or it got a hole in it. Happens sometimes.

By the way, if you read your quote, it says nothing about irradiated substances becoming radioactive. It says they are ionized - quite a different matter and an essential part of ordinary chemistry. It isn't particularly good for living tissue to get ionized, which is why they got the stuff off you ASAP, but it certainly doesn't make it radioactive.
 
Wayrad:

By the way, if you read your quote, it says nothing about irradiated substances becoming radioactive. It says they are ionized - quite a different matter and an essential part of ordinary chemistry. It isn't particularly good for living tissue to get ionized, which is why they got the stuff off you ASAP, but it certainly doesn't make it radioactive.


Then why did they determine they suceeded using a Geiger Counter?
 
SteveGrenard said:
Wayrad:




Then why did they determine they suceeded using a Geiger Counter?
To see if they had washed the radioactive material off that was stuck to your foot, of course!

edited to add: Positive reading= something radioactive present. Negative reading= radioactive substance removed. Now your shoe was still there. Isn't this a clue that the radioactive substance wasn't your shoe?
 
So some radioactive substance fell into my shoe and contaminated the shoe cover, the leather bottom of the shoe, the sock and the bottom of my foot. I am perplexed why it didnt contaminate the inside of the shoe but apparently it didn't.
They clearly obtained positive readings from the bottom of the shoe, the sock and the bottom of my foot.

Exactly how would such a radioactive substance be produced?

(Yes, I do not know what it was or what they thought it was as they were not telling me...they simply referred to it as "radiation").
 
SteveGrenard said:
Exactly how would such a radioactive substance be produced?
There are basically two ways:

1. Refining ore that has a naturally occuring radioactive substances in it.

2. Bombarding a stable material with neutrons or some high-energy particle that interacts with the nucleus (most EM radiation interacts with electrons, not with the nucleus). Typically this is in a reactor of some sort, if you're using neutrons. If you are bombarding nuclei with high energy protons or electrons you can use a particle accelerator as well.
(Yes, I do not know what it was or what they thought it was as they were not telling me...they simply referred to it as "radiation").
It's not uncommon to refer to radioactive materials that way, colloquially. But there are many kinds of radiation and they have different effects. I've tried not to use the term 'radiation' when I mean radioactive materials in these threads, just to keep this distinction clear.

Glad to hear you got cleaned off and suffered no ill effects.
 
SteveGrenard said:
So some radioactive substance fell into my shoe and contaminated the shoe cover, the leather bottom of the shoe, the sock and the bottom of my foot. I am perplexed why it didnt contaminate the inside of the shoe but apparently it didn't.
They clearly obtained positive readings from the bottom of the shoe, the sock and the bottom of my foot.

Exactly how would such a radioactive substance be produced?

(Yes, I do not know what it was or what they thought it was as they were not telling me...they simply referred to it as "radiation").
Yes, exactly! Without knowing what they were working with, I wouldn't know what isotope it might be. Evidently something was wandering around where it shouldn't be, though, either in particulate or liquid form. Careless of somebody. It may not have been particularly dangerous - probably not, going by the response. A good soap and water washing is about how one would respond to getting tritium or C-14 tracer spilled on oneself in a biology lab (edited to add: although these days there's also a lot of paperwork too...). If it were something like plutonium, I'd expect a lot more alarm.

People do tend to throw the words "radiation" and "radioactive material" around interchangeably, but they really weren't correct to do so.
 
Didn't you say you walked on a grid over a containment tank? One possibility is that you got hit by a drop or two from a splash. Something falling into the tank, for example a pebble carried in on the bottom of a shoe, might have done it. It's only a guess, though.
 
Yes, I had walked on a steel grid bridging a containment tank. I heard them talking that they thought this is where I got contaminated. I was allowed to take pictures and wanted a shot of the tank from directly on top of it. Our escort okayed it.

The film was fogged.
 
SteveGrenard said:
Wayrad:




Then why did they determine they suceeded using a Geiger Counter?

A geiger counter counts both ionizing photons and particle radiation. If you haven't any, the radioactive substance is gone. How does this tie in with your completely unrelated post about gamma radiation, which, while it will be detected by a geiger counter, won't make anything radioactive?
 
SteveGrenard said:
Yes, I had walked on a steel grid bridging a containment tank. I heard them talking that they thought this is where I got contaminated. I was allowed to take pictures and wanted a shot of the tank from directly on top of it. Our escort okayed it.

The film was fogged.
Steve,

Are you still trying to understand this as your shoes becoming radioactive after exposure to radiation or...?
 
SteveGrenard said:
Yes, I had walked on a steel grid bridging a containment tank. I heard them talking that they thought this is where I got contaminated. I was allowed to take pictures and wanted a shot of the tank from directly on top of it. Our escort okayed it.

The film was fogged.
Hmm...getting ready to take a picture often involves some rummaging in a bag or pocket. Did you happen to hear a splash? :D
 

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