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Part IV - GEIGER COUNTER

Geiger counters are provided to detect particles emitted from radioactively decaying nuclei. A given nucleus decays at a random time which cannot be predicted in advance. Thus, the distribution of decays from a radioactive source will show statistical fluctuations in time.

Measure the number of decays D registered by the Geiger counter in a 15-second time interval. Make this measurement a total of twenty times. Calculate tex2html_wrap_inline503 , tex2html_wrap_inline505 and tex2html_wrap_inline507 from your twenty values for D.

Statistical theory predicts that tex2html_wrap_inline511 for this sort of random event (characterized here by the fact that the probability that any one nucleus decays in a given time interval is very small -- this sort of probability distribution is called a Poisson distribution). Do your results approximately agree with this?