Radium is what you find in the ground minerals that will glow. The reactor rods are exposed, no water! They are off gassing into the atmosphere, they are releasing gaseous radium. This is what causes bone cancer. To have the knowledge that a black light can illuminate the radium (like with any radium mineral) would be a god send. People don't have Geiger counters. Its not the Geiger reading that we need to be concerned with. The background radiation overpowers any particulate reading.
@mythhealer Interesting. My relative is in remission from having lymphoma of the bone marrow, he was in the Korean war and they think he was exposed to something but we do not know. Again, I don't know if the nuclear stuff would glow under a black light. This is more novelty. I do know that biological things like blood will fluoresce when luminal is sprayed but you need to be at the lower end of the nanometer spectrum. Also urine will fluoresce for carpet cleaning.
@mythhealer I'll check out your vids, Thanks! As for what you are saying about RAD I have no clue about that. All I can say is that these particular minerals do fluoresce under a regular black light. You may require a different light for that application or at the very least, a light with a different spectrum of nanometer range. A standard black light is 365-400 nanometers to get good results with invisible ink, minerals, vaseline or irradiated glass.
Radium is what you find in the ground minerals that will glow. The reactor rods are exposed, no water! They are off gassing into the atmosphere, they are releasing gaseous radium. This is what causes bone cancer. To have the knowledge that a black light can illuminate the radium (like with any radium mineral) would be a god send. People don't have Geiger counters. Its not the Geiger reading that we need to be concerned with. The background radiation overpowers any particulate reading.
mythhealer 11 months ago
@mythhealer Interesting. My relative is in remission from having lymphoma of the bone marrow, he was in the Korean war and they think he was exposed to something but we do not know. Again, I don't know if the nuclear stuff would glow under a black light. This is more novelty. I do know that biological things like blood will fluoresce when luminal is sprayed but you need to be at the lower end of the nanometer spectrum. Also urine will fluoresce for carpet cleaning.
vtox101 11 months ago
I've been working on RAD detection accuracy. We might be able to simply use a bright light and a Black light??? damn!
Once the unit is calibrated... you need to know how to get accurate readings...
You can find my videos here... ... /watch?v=j-2kmw1RfoA
OR
You can also search for: Fukushima Fallout and go to the mythhealer video
OR
watch the two videos on the: mythhealer channel. searching for the mythhealer channel directly...
OR
You can E-mail me at: mythhealer@comcast.net
mythhealer 11 months ago
@mythhealer I'll check out your vids, Thanks! As for what you are saying about RAD I have no clue about that. All I can say is that these particular minerals do fluoresce under a regular black light. You may require a different light for that application or at the very least, a light with a different spectrum of nanometer range. A standard black light is 365-400 nanometers to get good results with invisible ink, minerals, vaseline or irradiated glass.
vtox101 11 months ago