h a l f b a k e r yNot from concentrate.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
Did you, perchance, mean "peripheral" benefits, aspects or devices? |
|
|
Thanks for correcting my sleep deprived spelling! |
|
|
I'm afraid radioactive does not mean luminous - common misconception that any radioactive items glow in the dark. |
|
|
Luminous golf balls for Night golf already exists. Very strange game to play (When I played it we all had a potholers torch on our heads - especially needed on the green). See link. There is no reason that a radioactive golf ball would glow in any way.
However, the locate via Geiger counter is a good idea. |
|
|
Regular use of this product would also eliminate the high grass, as it died back from previously lost balls. |
|
|
I play golf. I own a Geiger counter. Where do I sign up?? |
|
|
Hey, same here. I wonder if we can convince anyone to raid a golf range in Chernobyl. |
|
|
If it's radium paint it will glow... and give off enough radiation to be harmful.
But a slightly radioactive ball and hunting with a geiger counter is actually not a bad idea. |
|
|
I work in a nuclear facility, and a little radiation is nowhere near as bad for you as many people think. In fact, small doses may be beneficial. |
|
|
eulachon, there's a cashier's check here from an M. Burns for you to sign for... |
|
|
Yes, Uranium golf balls sound so much better than Titanium.
However, if the golf ball had a tuned circuit inside, then could it be located with a small transmitter? A good play on the word 'Ping'. |
|
|
Hey, post it and call it the "Ling Ping". |
|
|
Link to a study on radiation dosages and cancer added... |
|
|
If scared, you could always store the golf balls in a lead-lined compartment in your bag. But the only part of you that would really get any dose is your hand when you pick up your ball - radiation levels fall off exponentially with distance. |
|
|
How many golf balls would it take to turn the stock pile lights out? |
|
|
Based on the U.S. Plutonium stockpile alone, at least seven billion
to achieve a noticeable reduction. |
|
|
However, Pu, being an alpha rather than a beta emitter, isn't an
ideal excitation source for radioluminescence. |
|
|
That's only 115 balls per golfer, worldwide for the U.S. Plutonium (assuming U.S. billion). Just don't keep them in the same drawer. The pro shops might be a bit toasty and the Geiger counters might get annoying. |
|
|
Does this suggest we are not finding fitting uses for our waste radioactive resources? |
|
| |