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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Simon Rogers

Radiation exposure: a quick guide to what each level means

As radiation exposure around the Fukushima nuclear power plant reach levels of 400mSv per hour (although they've since gone down), we thought it was time to put the figures into perspective.

Radiation is all around us, all the time. But what level does it have to get to before it becomes really dangerous?

The World Nuclear Association (which represents the 'global nuclear profession') does have a guide. And while there is a touch of Smilin' Joe Fission, it is a good place to start for a useful primer.

There are different kinds of radiation - which you can read about in the WNA guide. The problems we're concerned about come from ionising radiation.

Radiation dosages are measured in sieverts - but because these are so big we're talking about millisieverts mSv (a thousandth of a sievert). Rather than being an exact unit of size (because different types of radiation have different effects) an mSv measures the effective radiation dose. According to the WNA, each mSv of radiation "produces the same biological effect".

We're exposed to radiation when we fly and when we get medical treatment - and whenever we leave the house. But the large dosages can have dramatic effects.

It has been known for many years that large doses of ionising radiation, very much larger than background levels, can cause a measurable increase in cancers and leukemias ('cancer of the blood') after some years delay. It must also be assumed, because of experiments on plants and animals, that ionising radiation can also cause genetic mutations that affect future generations, although there has been no evidence of radiation-induced mutation in humans. At very high levels, radiation can cause sickness and death within weeks of exposure

So, how high are levels in Japan? @mariansteinbach has been crowdsourcing the levels recorded at monitoring stations across Japan from the the official nuclear monitoring site here. Here are the results (in Grays, which are a unit of size, not of the effective dose received by people in the area). The users have also been monitoring a Geiger counter in Tokyo too (and here's how to read a Geiger counter).

So, how do the levels compare? We've accumulated information from the WNA, news agency reports and medical info site Radiologyinfo.org.

Data summary

Radiation exposure
Event Radiation reading, millisievert (mSv)
Single dose, fatal within weeks 10,000.00
Typical dosage recorded in those Chernobyl workers who died within a month 6,000.00
Single does which would kill half of those exposed to it within a month 5,000.00
Single dosage which would cause radiation sickness, including nausea, lower white blood cell count. Not fatal 1,000.00
Accumulated dosage estimated to cause a fatal cancer many years later in 5% of people 1,000.00
Max radiation levels recorded at Fukushima plant yesterday, per hour 400.00
Exposure of Chernobyl residents who were relocated after the blast in 1986 350.00
Recommended limit for radiation workers every five years 100.00
Lowest annual dose at which any increase in cancer is clearly evident 100.00
CT scan: heart 16.00
CT scan: abdomen & pelvis 15.00
Dose in full-body CT scan 10.00
Airline crew flying New York to Tokyo polar route, annual exposure 9.00
Natural radiation we're all exposed to, per year 2.00
CT scan: head 2.00
Spine x-ray 1.50
Radiation per hour detected at Fukushimia site, 12 March 1.02
Mammogram breast x-ray 0.40
Chest x-ray 0.10
Dental x-ray 0.01

SOURCES: WNA, REUTERS, RADIOLOGYINFO.ORG

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