Bob,
All three radon isotopes have gamma decay channels in addition to alpha. The signatures are well known (around 6 MeV). Radon detection is a cottage industry in silicon valley From: Bob Higgins Jeff's setup may be more sensitive to radon than Alan's. The NaI detector that Alan used is only sensitive to gamma, and not beta. Radon decay chains are primarily alpha and beta emissions. With the foil wrapped around Jeff's GM detector, he probably does not have much alpha sensitivity, but he will still have beta sensitivity - which could come from radon. Beta and alpha sensitivity can be evaluated with check sources. If Jeff is in the same area as Alan, he could borrow Alan's check sources, but I am not sure if Alan has a beta source. A good 24 hour background collection would also be useful as a null test to look for radon caused variation. On Sat, Mar 5, 2016 at 8:35 AM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote: From: Jack Cole Ø Jeff Morriss has just published a nice study showing radiation of 7x background. https://www.lenr-forum.com/forum/index.php/Thread/2847-Celani-Type-Replication/ This is nice. Here is one comment to file away as a possible mundane explanation. Jeff Morriss is in the same general geographic area as Alan Goldwater, and is probably working in his garage. Radon gas is known to be high in Alan’s area, and probably in Jeff’s also -- and 7x background is fully explainable by radon, if it is there… as is the apparent half-life average. … but wait, you say, Jeff did calibrate against background before seeing the higher rate, and also the half-life of 222Rn is about 4 days, not one hour. Yes, but this calibration would not eliminate the source being Radon, since he is running a charged wire experiment - and when the experiment is turned on, it would attract radon to the wire and thus concentrate the signal. Plus a factor of 7 concentration is not unusual; plus the average of all three radon isotopes can be in the one hour half-life range. Therefore – the source of radiation could be radon. At least it has not yet been ruled out. One way to lessen radon is to move the experiment outside, or to an area of lower radon emission (assuming it is high at Jeff’s location).