Retirement has blessed me with time (perhaps too much) to ponder various things. First, when you do a roast on a rotisserie where do you put the thermometer? Usually you aim for the epi-center of the roast but now you have a metal rod there.
B. Ok, I should have paid more attention in chemistry or physics or whatever. So, knowing that the half life of Cobalt-60 is 7.22222222 years, lets say I pop over to the NukeMart and pick up a new fresh box of C-60. I stick in the pantry for say, 8 years. When I open it what will I have? Will it be the same shape, color, etc?
Thirdly, watching an old Outter Limits there is a scene where Robert Kulp is feeling frisky and decides he doesn't want to get transported to the planet Poopon after all. So, while the scientists are trying to calm him down in the lab Robby grabs the head of an X-ray machine and aims and fires it like a ray gun. I'm not really sure this would be all that effective. More importantly lets say I'm walking past the lab door with my new Harbor Fright geiger counter, will it detect the X-rays flying around?
B. Ok, I should have paid more attention in chemistry or physics or whatever. So, knowing that the half life of Cobalt-60 is 7.22222222 years, lets say I pop over to the NukeMart and pick up a new fresh box of C-60. I stick in the pantry for say, 8 years. When I open it what will I have? Will it be the same shape, color, etc?
Thirdly, watching an old Outter Limits there is a scene where Robert Kulp is feeling frisky and decides he doesn't want to get transported to the planet Poopon after all. So, while the scientists are trying to calm him down in the lab Robby grabs the head of an X-ray machine and aims and fires it like a ray gun. I'm not really sure this would be all that effective. More importantly lets say I'm walking past the lab door with my new Harbor Fright geiger counter, will it detect the X-rays flying around?