Electrons and small atoms are kinds of ionizing radiation. Also, it’s not the photonic type that makes something else radioactive (mostly). It’s the particles. Look up what neutrons are doing in nuclear reactors. They “contaminate” things that aren’t normally radioactive because neutrons ‘stick’ to their atoms and make the atom unstable because now it’s a different, most likely less stable isotope.
SkybreakerEngineer@lemmy.world 1 week ago
Any time you talk radiation, you need to be specific about what kind of particles, how much energy they have, and how much of it there is.
Most of the stuff in orbit is charged particles (electrons and small atoms) and low energy photons. Those get stopped by relatively thin layers of shielding, but if you’re not careful you’ll get cooked from raw heat.
Ionizing radiation like neutrons or x- and gamma-range photons can radioactivate materials, and take more shielding – think feet of water or a couple inches of lead. Nuclear reactors have that, but spaceships don’t. Fortunately unless you bring a reactor with you they’re rare enough that it’s not really necessary.
Substances become radioactive when they get hit by some kind of ionizing radiation and change into an isotope that itself emits radiation. Conducting radiation like a wick isn’t really a thing.
MotoAsh@piefed.social 1 week ago
fullsquare@awful.systems 1 week ago
you need really spicy photons for activation to happen