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Chapter 14 from BASICS OF NUCLEAR PHYSICS AND OF RADIATION DETECTION AND MEASUREMENT - An open-access textbook for nuclear and radiochemistry students by Jukka Lehto
When measuring the activity ($\text{A}_x$) of a radioactive source the primary result is the total (gross) count rate ($\text{R}_g$) obtained from the measurement system (detector, amplifier and pulse counter)
$$R_g = \frac{X_g}{t}$$
[XIV.I]
where $\text{X}_g$ = number of collected total pulses and $\text{t}$ = measurement time. The unit of count rate is pulses per unit time: counts per second (s-1, cps) or counts per minute (cpm).
The observed gross count rate ($\text{R}_g$) includes, in addition to pulses resulting from the radioactive source (net pulses $\text{X}_n$), also pulses from background ($\text{X}_{bg}$) originating from various sources other than the actual source, such as cosmic radiation, presence of natural or pollution radionuclides and electric noise of the measurement system. These background pulses need to be counted separately in the absence of the radioactive source and the background count rate must be subtracted from the gross count rate to obtain the net count rate ($\text{R}_n$) originating from the radioactive source.
$$R_n = \frac{X_g}{t_g} - \frac{X_{bg}}{t_{bg}}$$
[XIV.II]
Activity of the source ($\text{A}_{x}$) is calculated either by comparing the net count rate of the source ($\text{R}_{x}$) to that obtained by measuring a standard source ($\text{R}_{st}$) with a known activity ($\text{A}_{st}$) in identical conditions as the unknown source
$$A_x = A_{st} \times \left( \frac{R_x}{R_{st}} \right)$$
[XIV.III]
or if the counting efficiency ($\text{E(%)}$) of the counting system is known dividing the net count rate with the counting efficiency.
$$A_x = R_x \left( \frac{E}{100} \right)$$
[XIV.IV]
What kind of uncertainties are involved here and how they are calculated are discussed below.
In every measurement, including radioactivity measurement, there are two types of errors resulting in an uncertainty in the measurement result:
Below we discuss in more detail the uncertainties arising from the stochastic nature of radioactive decay.
Figure IV.1. Effect of systematic and random error on observed results. Left side: high precision but low accuracy. Right side: low precision but high accuracy.
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