| Bq | becquerel |
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| Becquerel | <unit> The Systeme Internationale (SI unit, MKS) unit of radioactivity (Bq), named after the discoverer of radioactivity and equal to 1 nuclear transition or disintegration per second. Use is fairly recent, superseding the Curie (Ci). 1Ci = 37 GBq (16 Dec 1997) |
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| Becquerel rays | An obsolete term for radiations given off by uranium and other radioactive substances; these include alpha, beta, and gamma ray's. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Becquerel, Antoine | <person> French physicist and Nobel laureate, 1852-1908. See: becquerel, Becquerel rays. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Becquerel, Antoine-Henri | <person, radiobiology> French scientist and discoverer of radioactivity, co-winner of Nobel Prize. (See Curie) (13 Nov 1997) |
| becquerel |
French physicist who discovered that rays emitted by uranium salts affect photographic plates (1852-1908)
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| becquerel |
means one disintegration per second.
Ãâó: www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/cfr/part034...
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| becquerel |
The SI unit of activity equal to one disintegration per second. [37 billion (3.7x1010) becquerels = 1 curie (Ci)].
Ãâó: www.ndt.net/article/az/rt/rt.htm
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| becquerel |
A quantitative measure of radioactivity. This is an alternate measure of activity used internationally. One becquerel of activity is equal to one nuclear decay per second. All references to quantities of radioactive material in this report are made in curies (Ci), followed in parentheses by the equivalent in becquerels. There 3.7 x 10 10 Bq in 1 Ci.
Ãâó: www.stoller-eser.com/Annuals/2003/AppendixE.htm
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| becquerel |
(Bq.) A measure of the amount of radiation given off by a radioactive substance. A Becquerel is "one disintegration per second". It can express a concentration of radioactivity, eg 200 Bq. per gramme, or a total quantity, eg emissions limits for nuclear plant are given as so many Becquerels per year. Bq replaces the earlier measure "Curies" [qv]
Ãâó: www.llrc.org/jargonbuster.htm
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| becquerel | French physicist who discovered that rays emitted by uranium salts affect photographic plates (1852-1908) |
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