Abstract
IONIC mobilities in liquids are of the order of 10-3 cm.2/volt/sec., and ion chambers filled with liquids are therefore generally useless in connexion with pulse amplifiers. Free electrons should have a much higher mobility ; but their path before capture is extremely short in most liquids. We have been unable to detect them in carefully purified hexane. However, in condensed argon, charge carriers with a mobility greater than 40 cm.2/volt/sec. have been found, and these are undoubtedly electrons.
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References
Rittner, E. S., Phys. Rev., 73, 1212 (1948).
Corson, D. R., and Wilson, R. R., Rev. Sci. Instr., 19, 207 (1948).
Davidson, N., and Larsh, A. E., Phys. Rev., 74, 220 (1948).
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HUTCHINSON, G. Ionization in Liquid and Solid Argon. Nature 162, 610–611 (1948). https://doi.org/10.1038/162610a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/162610a0
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