radium$66566$ - translation to spanish
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radium$66566$ - translation to spanish

INSTRUMENT DIALS PAINTED WITH RADIUM-BASED PAINT
Radium-dial; Painting radium; Radium clock; Radium dials; Radium paint
  • November 1917 ad for an Ingersoll "Radiolite" watch, one of the first watches mass marketed in the USA featuring a radium-illuminated dial.
  • Radium was initially touted as a positively salutary substance, as this January 1922 ad from the ''Buffalo Times'' illustrates.
  • Wristwatch produced for the US Army during World War II showing characteristic sandy deterioration of radium–zinc sulfide painted hands and numbers. Such a watch should not be opened due to the danger of inhalation of airborne particles.
  • ultraviolet light]] to increase luminescence
  • Three radium dials and a radon detector are placed in a sealed plastic container. After 6 hours, the radon level was 446 pCi/L.

radium      
n. radio
radium         
  • Marie and Pierre Curie experimenting with radium, a drawing by [[André Castaigne]]
  • [[Decay chain]] of <sup>238</sup>U, the primordial [[progenitor]] of <sup>226</sup>Ra
  • This is an example of a King plot where it zooms in the important points to show its details.
  • Monument to the Discovery of Radium in [[Jáchymov]]
  • Radium watch hands under ultraviolet light
  • Glass tube of radium chloride kept by the US Bureau of Standards that served as the primary standard of radioactivity for the United States in 1927.
CHEMICAL ELEMENT WITH THE ATOMIC NUMBER OF 88
Element 88; Radium (Ra); User:Double sharp/Radium; Ra (element); Raydium; Eka-barium
radio
bismuth         
  • World mine production and annual averages of bismuth price (New York, not adjusted for inflation).<ref name="usgs" />
  • Pressure-temperature phase diagram of bismuth. T<sub>C</sub> refers to the superconducting transition temperature
  • [[Bismite]] mineral
  • [[Alchemical symbol]] used by [[Torbern Bergman]] (1775)
  • [[Bismuth vanadate]], a yellow pigment
  • Chunk of a broken bismuth ingot
  • Bismuth oxychloride (BiOCl) structure (mineral [[bismoclite]]). Bismuth atoms are shown as grey, oxygen red, chlorine green.
  • 18th-century engraving of bismuth processing. During this era, bismuth was used to treat some digestive complaints.
  • interference]] of light within the oxide film on its surface. Right: a 1&nbsp;cm<sup>3</sup> cube of unoxidised bismuth metal
CHEMICAL ELEMENT WITH SYMBOL BI AND ATOMIC NUMBER 83
Element 83; Bismuth (element); Bismuthic; Bismuthous; Bismouth; Radium E; Bismuth poisoning; Bi (element); Bizmuth; 🜾; Sodium bismuthide; Bismith; History of bismuth
(n.) = bismuto
Ex: She is writing a paper comparing tungsten and bismuth deficiency in relation to liver disease.

Definition

Radium
·add. ·noun An intensely radioactive metallic element found (combined) in minute quantities in pitchblende, and various other uranium minerals. Symbol, Ra; atomic weight, 226.4. Radium was discovered by M. and Mme. Curie, of Paris, who in 1902 separated compounds of it by a tedious process from pitchblende. Its compounds color flames carmine and give a characteristic spectrum. It resembles barium chemically. Radium preparations are remarkable for maintaining themselves at a higher temperature than their surroundings, and for their radiations, which are of three kinds: alpha rays, beta rays, and gamma rays (see these terms). By reason of these rays they ionize gases, affect photographic plates, cause sores on the skin, and produce many other striking effects. Their degree of activity depends on the proportion of radium present, but not on its state of chemical combination or on external conditions. The radioactivity of radium is therefore an atomic property, and is explained as result from a disintegration of the atom. This breaking up occurs in at least seven stages; the successive main products have been studied and are called radium emanation or exradio, radium A, radium B, radium C, ·etc. (The emanation is a heavy gas, the later products are solids.) These products are regarded as unstable elements, each with an atomic weight a little lower than its predecessor. It is possible that lead is the stable end product. At the same time the light gas helium is formed; it probably consists of the expelled alpha particles. The heat effect mentioned above is ascribed to the impacts of these particles. Radium, in turn, is believed to be formed indirectly by an immeasurably slow disintegration of uranium.

Wikipedia

Radium dial

Radium dials are watch, clock and other instrument dials painted with luminous paint containing radium-226 to produce radioluminescence. Radium dials were produced throughout most of the 20th century before being replaced by safer tritium-based luminous material in the 1970s and finally by non-toxic, non-radioactive strontium aluminate–based photoluminescent material from the middle 1990s.