<br><br>Your numbers are wrong and you are forgetting that the brushes contain Polonium IN A METAL MATRIX. You would have to purify the Polonium or atomize it and that is extraordinarily difficult to do without poisoning yourself first.
<br><br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 12/1/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">Chris Doss</b> <<a href="mailto:lookoverhere1@yahoo.com">lookoverhere1@yahoo.com</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
<br>--- Daniel Davies <<a href="mailto:d_squared_2002@yahoo.co.uk">d_squared_2002@yahoo.co.uk</a>> wrote:<br><br>><br>> Chris, the half-life of polonium is like 130 days.<br>> If you want it to be<br>> radioactive enough to do what it did to Litvinenko,
<br>> then you need it to be<br>> fresh out the reactor.<br>><br>> (also, you would need to buy like half a million<br>> quid's worth of these brushes,<br>> which would probably show up somewhere).<br>>
<br>I'm no physicist, but this is what a friend of a<br>friend said on the subject:<br><br>/Most interestingly, from the article you sent,<br>"Polonium -210 is present in the "element" at a level<br>of 250 microcuries."
<br><br>According to the radiation experts cited in the New<br>Scientist article, "a gigabecquerel of polonium-210<br>would have been enough to kill Litvinenko." The<br>Becquerel is a measure of a quantity of radioactivity
<br>equal to a rate of decay releasing 1 neutron per<br>second (the Curie is the older measure, less accurate<br>because it referred to the neutron emission level of<br>one gram of Radium 226). This changes over time as<br>
the radioactive material decays and becquerels are<br>therefore usually used as a measure of "total dose<br>over time". This is why such a small amount of highly<br>radioactive material is needed to kill; even if
<br>substance has a short half-life and decays quickly, if<br>the initial neutron emission rate is very high and the<br>total exposure time is long (e.g., days or weeks), an<br>extremely small amount of material (e.g., micrograms)
<br>can give you enough of a dose-over-time to be lethal.<br><br><a href="http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn10668-exspys-polonium-poisoning.">http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn10668-exspys-polonium-poisoning.</a>..
<br><br><br>Fiddling with the conversion factors (1 curie =<br>37,000,000,000 becquerels) we find that each of those<br>static brushes contains 9,250,000,000 becquerels of<br>radioactivity, or c. 9.25 gigabecquerels, e.g. more
<br>than nine times the amount necessary to kill if it<br>were rendered into dust and inhaled, ingested or<br>injected.<br><br>All for $19.14 + shipping and handling.<br><br>Pretty lethal consumer product. No wonder they
<br>included a MSDS and a lot of warning information./<br><br><br><br><br><br><br>____________________________________________________________________________________<br>Do you Yahoo!?<br>Everyone is raving about the all-new Yahoo! Mail beta.
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