[Rockhounds] Telling the UV from the Lamppost.
Tom Bowers
tomrbowers at yahoo.com
Fri May 15 14:53:51 PDT 2009
So, those folks who sell safety glasses for viewing shortwave fluoresence, are those just normal glass lens glasses?
--- On Fri, 5/15/09, Axel Emmermann <axel.emmermann at pandora.be> wrote:
From: Axel Emmermann <axel.emmermann at pandora.be>
Subject: RE: [Rockhounds] Telling the UV from the Lamppost.
To: "'Rockhounds at drizzle.com: A mailing list for rock and gem collectors'" <rockhounds at lists.drizzle.com>
Date: Friday, May 15, 2009, 2:45 AM
>
> All glass?
[Axel] Yes, except the kind of glass that the bulb is made of. That's
barium-silicate glass, designed to pass UV and quite expensive.
> I have a SW UV bulb with no markings other than "Japan" that was made in
> the 1960's. It looks to have been made of glass with two filaments
> inside. The filaments have a whitish glow next to them when 120v is put
> to them
[Axel] If you can see the filaments when the lamp's off it's clearly a
short-wave.
> and the light is passed through a special filter, which looks to
> be made of some very dark purple crystalline material, for the SW UV.
[Axel] That would be a UV-diaphanous filter. If it's from the 60's it is
probably an old type that suffers from solarisation easily and has a limited
lifespan. Does it still perform?
> The shape of the bulb is like that of the other in the lamp, a standard
> F4T5-BLB LW bulb.
[Axel] a 4 watt? How large is the filter?
> Your answer is good and I accept it as a general pretty good one as the
> fact that UVC does not penetrate ordinary window glass is a good
> distinguishing characteristic. And ordinary window glass can be found
> almost anywhere.
>
> So the answer would appear to me to be: 1. find something that will
> fluoresce. 2. Put it behind some ordinary glass and see if it will
> still fluoresce with the same lamp. 3. Yes = LW; No = SW.
>
[Axel] Yes, Houston we have lift off ;-))))
You're welcome
Axel!
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