Gamma-ray spectrometry is one of the key techniques in the measurement of radioactive materials. Used by scientists from a wide range of disciplines, problems can be encountered by the inexperienced user because there is a deceptive simplicity in gamma-ray measurements that can hide significant pitfalls.
"Practical Gamma-ray Spectrometry" is aimed at the analyst using the instrument - it is nearer to a workshop manual than an academic treatise. Each chapter ends with a "Practical Points" section, which is not a summary as such but a reminder of the more important practical features discussed within the chapter. Mathematics is deliberately kept to a minimum and, in most cases, equations are presented as faites accomplis and are not derived. The book is not intended as a survey of the latest research nor a historical study, and there are very few specific references in the text. Those that do exist are put at the end of each chapter, where there will also be found a more general short list of "Further Reading".
New features of this edition include:
No previous knowledge of nuclear matters or instrumentation is assumed, and the text can be used by complete beginners. "Practical Gamma-ray Spectrometry" will enable all those involved with radioactivity measurements to get the most from their equipment. It will also be of value to researchers, instructors and students in university departments where the measurement of radioactivity is routine, such as physics, chemistry, environmental biology, archaeometry and radiochemistry, and in the nuclear industry as a whole. Это и многое другое вы найдете в книге Practical Gamma–ray Spectroscopy (Gordon Gilmore)