drive Geiger - définition. Qu'est-ce que drive Geiger
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est drive Geiger - définition

EMPIRICAL 1911 RULE RELATING ALPHA DECAY ENERGY TO DECAY HALF-LIFE
Geiger-Nuttall; Geiger-Nuttall Law; Geiger-Nuttal Law; Geiger-Nuttal law; Geiger-Nuttall rule; Geiger-Nuttall law; Geiger-Nuttall relation

drive Geiger      
n.
The sound that a hard drive makes when being accessed by the computer. Originates from the fact that accessing a hard drive usually sounds like a Geiger counter near a radioactive substance.
When I opened up the file, the drive Geiger from my computer was so loud that I was afraid I'd broken something.
Geiger–Nuttall law         
In nuclear physics, the Geiger–Nuttall law or Geiger–Nuttall rule relates the decay constant of a radioactive isotope with the energy of the alpha particles emitted. Roughly speaking, it states that short-lived isotopes emit more energetic alpha particles than long-lived ones.
Anna Margarethe Geiger         
GERMAN PAINTER (1783-1809)
Anna Margarete Geiger; Anna Margareta Geiger; Anna Margaretha Geiger
Anna Margaretha Geiger (1783–1809) was a German pastellist. Her middle name is sometimes given as Margarete or Margareta.

Wikipédia

Geiger–Nuttall law

In nuclear physics, the Geiger–Nuttall law or Geiger–Nuttall rule relates the decay constant of a radioactive isotope with the energy of the alpha particles emitted. Roughly speaking, it states that short-lived isotopes emit more energetic alpha particles than long-lived ones.

The relationship also shows that half-lives are exponentially dependent on decay energy, so that very large changes in half-life make comparatively small differences in decay energy, and thus alpha particle energy. In practice, this means that alpha particles from all alpha-emitting isotopes across many orders of magnitude of difference in half-life, all nevertheless have about the same decay energy.

Formulated in 1911 by Hans Geiger and John Mitchell Nuttall as a relation between the decay constant and the range of alpha particles in air, in its modern form the Geiger–Nuttall law is

log 10 T 1 / 2 = A ( Z ) E + B ( Z ) {\displaystyle \log _{10}T_{1/2}={\frac {A(Z)}{\sqrt {E}}}+B(Z)}

where T 1 / 2 {\displaystyle T_{1/2}} is the half-life, E the total kinetic energy (of the alpha particle and the daughter nucleus), and A and B are coefficients that depend on the isotope's atomic number Z. The law works best for nuclei with even atomic number and even atomic mass. The trend is still there for even-odd, odd-even, and odd-odd nuclei but is not as pronounced.