Abstract
IT was so early as 1903 that the British physicists, Rutherford and McLennan, noticed that the rate of leakage of an electric charge from an electroscope within an air-tight metal chamber could be reduced by enclosing the chamber within a completely encircling metal shield or box with walls a centimetre or more thick. This meant that the loss of charge of the enclosed electroscope was not due to imperfectly insulating supports but must rather be due to some highly penetrating rays, like the gamma rays of radium, which could pass through metal walls as much as a centimetre thick and ionise the gas inside.
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MILLIKAN, R. High Frequency Rays of Cosmic Origin1. Nature 116, 823–825 (1925). https://doi.org/10.1038/116823a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/116823a0