0 Comments

  1. Ray of Sunshine
    June 22, 2017

    Something that looks like an electrochemical reaction test, but I’m ignorant with biological test equipment, so I don’t know specifically what you’re looking for.

    Reply
  2. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Here’s the hint I gave Gnotic Pasta​. It’s a safety/regulatory thing.

    Reply
  3. Tim Stoev
    June 22, 2017

    measuring the samples taken from a blending batch (probably medical substance given the table and the wall) using a spectrometer. Can’t guess the manufacturer of the software and the device though, it is years since I worked on such solutions.

    Reply
  4. waqas mumtaz
    June 22, 2017

    Watching porn

    Reply
  5. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Tim Stoev​, it has nothing to do with medical substances and it’s not exactly a spectrometer (but that part is close). If you guess what spectrum, you’ll be on the right track.

    Reply
  6. Mama Bear
    June 22, 2017

    Something Scientificky… 😜😷

    Reply
  7. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Ha ha, Mama Bear​.

    Reply
  8. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Ray of Sunshine​, I’ll give you another hint. It has nothing to do with grocery-go-getters.

    Reply
  9. Cass Morrison
    June 22, 2017

    looks like you’re using a scintillation counter. maybe Radon?

    Reply
  10. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Close Cass Morrison​. It’s a well counter, which is a special kind of gamma counter.

    Reply
  11. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Here’s what I’m listening to (for Ray of Sunshine​ and Gnotic Pasta​) while you guess what I’m measuring.

    https://youtu.be/3y4jaa6u5pc

    Reply
  12. Tim Stoev
    June 22, 2017

    I should have zoomed in. The keV on the axis is obvious

    Using the great quality of the photo to my advantage, I can definitely say that you are testing the radiation on site probably by putting a number of samples in the places marked on the radiological safety report and then measuring those for radiation.

    I should have payed more attention to the solid and thick parts of the measurement equipment- spectrometers does not normally require such shielding.

    Now the question that comes after really putting some attention to the topic is why there are more than 8 samples on the table?

    I can understand one for reference which will make the number 9, but there are 12 on the table(including the one in the device)

    Reply
  13. Cass Morrison
    June 22, 2017

    Yeah Chad Haney I trained in Nuclear Medicine out of HS so I did recognize that part.

    Reply
  14. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Tim Stoev​, the number of samples is misleading. There are two other sheets not shown.

    Reply
  15. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Cass Morrison​, you should be able to guess with a Nuc Med training and my hint above.

    Reply
  16. Cass Morrison
    June 22, 2017

    HS – don’t make me say how long ago that was…unless you’re prepping injection doses.

    Reply
  17. Rabia Jamil
    June 22, 2017

    Dose calibrator or scintillation counter? Area survey? But what are those in blue tubes? Wipe test?

    Reply
  18. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Gnotic Pasta​, wipe tests to document no radioactive contamination. We do a survey after each experiment with a Geiger-Mueller counter.

    Reply
  19. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Rabia Jamil, the dose calibrator is to the far left. I’m using the well counter, which is the shorter device in the center. The blue tubes contain wipe test samples.

    Reply
  20. Rabia Jamil
    June 22, 2017

    Chad Haney​ so what experiment have you done?

    Reply
  21. Chad Haney
    June 22, 2017

    Rabia Jamil​, there’s no experiment today. The wipe test is done monthly to document any possible trace amounts of radioactivity.

    Reply
  22. Rabia Jamil
    June 22, 2017

    Chad Haney​ oh okay

    Reply
  23. Elizabeth Monahan
    June 23, 2017

    #Love Dr. Seuss and Science

    Reply
  24. Ray of Sunshine
    June 23, 2017

    You are the Homer Simpson of the lab, constantly exposed, then? 😉

    Do you have to work near radiation a lot?

    Reply
  25. Chad Haney
    June 23, 2017

    Ray of Sunshine​, I’m modest. I don’t expose myself at work. Maybe Gnotic Pasta​is more bold. I work with radioactivity about 3-4 times per week. However, there are some weeks without.

    Reply
  26. Cass Morrison
    June 23, 2017

    Interesting, I’m the RSO at my work and I was training authorized workers today. We send out leak tests away.

    Reply
  27. Chad Haney
    June 23, 2017

    Cass Morrison​, I’m on the radiation safety committee but I wouldn’t want to be the RSO.

    Reply
  28. Henk van der Gaast
    June 23, 2017

    bit of spectrometry..

    Reply
  29. ponderous tomes
    June 23, 2017

    you’re making meth right?

    Reply
  30. Cass Morrison
    June 23, 2017

    We have one sealed nuclear gauge so it’s not a big deal.

    Reply
  31. Jebediah I
    June 25, 2017

    Similar to the production of drugs. I’m calling the police!

    Reply
  32. Jiwan Danal
    June 29, 2017

    Hi

    Reply
  33. Jiwan Danal
    June 29, 2017

    G

    Reply
  34. Preethi Saju
    July 24, 2017

    check moral issues

    Reply
  35. VR Vlogs
    November 5, 2017

    IDK

    Reply

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