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[MUSIC PLAYING]
So here we are on the last day of the recording for the
Christmas Lectures, but I thought I'd take an
opportunity to point this out because it's so beautiful.
This is a really stunning cloud chamber, and the tracks
that you can see here show just the natural radiation in
the atmosphere around us.
So if we actually have a look in here, you can see sometimes
there are thicker tracks which are big heavy alpha particles.
Sometimes they're little wispy ones,
which are beta particles.
But all of these, they're all working in the same way.
So the atmosphere in here contains a
lot vapour of alcohol.
And it's sort of more than it should have.
And when these charged particles fire through the
atmosphere in here, they cause little droplets to form, and
those are the clouds that you're seeing.
So this is a similar sort of thing to when you get a track
behind an airplane.
There's a lot of moisture in the atmosphere and it's just
the exhaust, just helping those drops of moisture to
form together and leave that cloud.
And this is a tiny little sample of the
element called Americium.
And this is used in smoke detectors.
So you've probably got some of this in your home, at least
you should have.
So this is an artificially produced metal.
And as soon as this is introduced, look at that.
What we're seeing here are tracks from the alpha
particles emitted from this radioactive source.
And these alpha particles, with their two protons, two
neutrons, and they grab electrons
and form Helium atoms.
So what you're seeing here are the birth of Helium atoms.
[MUSIC PLAYING]