A glass rod rubbed with silk is used to charge gold leaf electroscope
Answers
Answered by
1
HEY DEAR ...
He obvious answer is nothing, because the leaf should be in a vacuum vessel, so there is no air to ionise around it.
But not all electroscopes are in vacuum, and the air at the measurement knob is still in contact, so there will be paths where air ionised by the x-rays can discharge it.
But I would not want to be near it if the x-ray flux was high enough to have a significant effect!
HOPE , IT HELPS ...
He obvious answer is nothing, because the leaf should be in a vacuum vessel, so there is no air to ionise around it.
But not all electroscopes are in vacuum, and the air at the measurement knob is still in contact, so there will be paths where air ionised by the x-rays can discharge it.
But I would not want to be near it if the x-ray flux was high enough to have a significant effect!
HOPE , IT HELPS ...
Similar questions