Radiation Detection and Monitoring

Overview

Radiation Detection and Monitoring explains how ionizing radiation is detected, measured, and monitored for safety and practical applications.

Radiation cannot usually be seen, smelled, or felt directly, so instruments are required.

This page deepens ideas from:

Definition

Radiation detection is the use of instruments to reveal the presence of ionizing radiation indirectly through its effects on matter.

Why It Matters

Detection is important for:

  • identifying radioactive sources
  • measuring activity trends
  • monitoring contamination
  • protecting workers
  • controlling medical dose
  • industrial quality control
  • scientific experiments

Key Representations

Why Radiation Detection Is Needed

Radiation cannot usually be detected directly by human senses.

So we use devices that respond when radiation ionises matter.

Geiger-Muller Tube Overview

What It Does

A Geiger-Muller tube detects ionizing radiation entering the tube.

Incoming radiation ionises gas inside the tube, producing an electrical pulse.

Each pulse is counted.

Output

Readings may be shown as:

  • counts per second
  • counts per minute

Uses

  • locating sources
  • comparing source strengths
  • monitoring contamination

Limitation

A GM tube gives count rate information, not a full precise energy spectrum.

Cloud Chamber Overview

A cloud chamber shows visible tracks of charged particles.

Radiation ionises vapour, causing condensation droplets.

It is useful for:

  • observing particle paths
  • distinguishing some radiation types qualitatively

Spark Counter Overview

Radiation ionises gas between plates, causing sparks.

It is useful mainly for demonstration or counting events.

Film Badge and Dosimeter

Purpose

These are used for personal monitoring of radiation exposure.

Film Badge

Radiation darkens photographic film.

Greater darkening indicates larger exposure.

Electronic Dosimeter

This provides direct dose reading and may give alarms in some systems.

It is used by:

  • hospital staff
  • nuclear workers
  • researchers

Count Rate and Background Count

Detectors measure both source radiation and natural background radiation.

Thus:

So:

Always subtract background when analysing source data.

Monitoring Contamination

Contamination means radioactive material is present on surfaces, clothing, or inside the body.

Monitoring may involve:

  • scanning hands or clothes with a detector
  • checking laboratory benches
  • testing containers
  • surveying spills

Higher-than-background readings may indicate contamination.

Personal Monitoring

Workers near radiation sources may use:

  • film badges
  • electronic dosimeters
  • routine area surveys

Purpose:

  • keep dose within safe limits
  • identify unsafe exposure early

Choosing Detector for Purpose

PurposeSuitable Method
Quick source detectionGM tube
Personal dose monitoringFilm badge or dosimeter
Observe particle tracksCloud chamber
Area contamination surveyGM tube

Worked Reasoning Examples

Example 1: Corrected Count Rate

Measured:

Background:

Then:

Example 2: Which Detector for a Hospital Worker?

Answer:

Film badge or personal dosimeter.

Example 3: Detector Reading Falls with Distance

Reason:

Radiation intensity usually decreases as distance increases.

Example 4: Reading Still Non-Zero with Source Removed

Reason:

Background radiation remains.

Summary

  • radiation is usually detected using instruments rather than human senses
  • a GM tube is common for counting radiation
  • background count must be subtracted
  • dosimeters monitor personal exposure
  • detector choice depends on purpose
  • counts fluctuate because decay is random