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GeigerMaß

Geigermaß is a term used in German-language contexts to refer to the reading displayed by a Geiger counter. It denotes the rate at which ionizing events are detected by the instrument and is typically expressed in counts per minute (CPM) or counts per second (CPS). In casual usage, some people treat Geigermaß as a direct measure of dose rate, but converting it to dose requires calibration because the relationship between count rate and absorbed radiation dose depends on the radiation type, energy spectrum, and detector efficiency.

Measurement principle: A Geiger counter contains a Geiger–Müller tube. When ionizing radiation produces an ionization event

Calibration and interpretation: To relate CPM/CPS to dose equivalent (for example μSv/h), devices are calibrated with

Applications and limitations: Geigermaß is widely used in public safety, industrial monitoring, and hobbyist settings as

History: The Geiger counter was developed by Hans Geiger and Walther Müller in the 1920s, and the

inside
the
tube,
a
short
electrical
pulse
is
generated
and
counted
by
the
device.
The
reported
Geigermaß
is
the
total
number
of
pulses
per
unit
time,
often
averaged
over
a
short
interval
to
smooth
fluctuations.
standard
radiation
sources
and
use
a
conversion
factor
that
varies
with
energy.
Background
radiation
contributes
to
the
Geigermaß,
so
background
counts
are
typically
subtracted
for
more
accurate
readings.
At
high
count
rates,
the
detector’s
dead
time
can
cause
undercounting.
a
rough
indication
of
radiation
presence
and
intensity.
It
does
not
provide
energy-specific
information
and
cannot
distinguish
radiation
types;
precise
assessment
of
risk
or
source
activity
requires
more
specialized
instrumentation
and
calibration.
shorthand
term
Geigermaß
has
emerged
in
informal
contexts
to
describe
the
device’s
readout.