WoodyPE
Mechanical
- Dec 26, 2006
- 101
Fukushima Daiichi #3 had a second explosion on March 14, 2011. Soon after the explosion the radiation level was measured at 50 microsieverts per hour in the service hall and 20 microsieverts per hour at the plant gate. The allowable dose for a typical nuclear worker is 20 millisieverts per year. Hence at the plant gate the worker would reach dose in 1000 hours.
1 Sv = 1000 mSv (millisieverts) = 1,000,000 ?Sv (microsieverts)
Radiation dose benchmarks courtesy of the Wikipedia:
Yearly Dose Examples
? Living near a nuclear power station: less than 0.01 mSv/year
? Cosmic radiation (from sky) at sea level: 0.24 mSv/year
? Terrestrial radiation (from ground): 0.28 mSv/year
? Natural radiation in the human body: 0.40 mSv/year
? Typical individual's natural background radiation: 2 mSv/year; 1.5 mSv/year for Australians, 3 mSv/year for Americans
? Radon in the average US home: 2 mSv/year
? Average American's total radiation exposure: 6.2 mSv/year
? New York-Tokyo flights for airline crew: 9 mSv/year
? Smoking 1.5 packs/day: 13 mSv/year Current average limit for nuclear workers: 20 mSv/year
? Background radiation in parts of Iran, India and Europe: 50 mSv/year
? Lowest clearly carcinogenic level: 100 mSv/year
Lifetime Dose Examples
? Criterion for relocation after Chernobyl disaster: 350 mSv/lifetime
Symptom Benchmarks
Effects to humans of acute radiation (within one day):
? 0–0.25 Sv: None
? 0.25–1 Sv: Some people feel nausea and loss of appetite; bone marrow, lymph nodes, spleen damaged.
? 1–3 Sv: Mild to severe nausea, loss of appetite, infection; more severe bone marrow, lymph node, spleen damage; recovery probable, not assured.
? 3–6 Sv: Severe nausea, loss of appetite; hemorrhaging, infection, diarrhea, skin peels, sterility; death if untreated.
? 6–10 Sv: Above symptoms plus central nervous system impairment; death expected.
? Above 10 Sv: Incapacitation and death.
1 Sv = 1000 mSv (millisieverts) = 1,000,000 ?Sv (microsieverts)
Radiation dose benchmarks courtesy of the Wikipedia:
Yearly Dose Examples
? Living near a nuclear power station: less than 0.01 mSv/year
? Cosmic radiation (from sky) at sea level: 0.24 mSv/year
? Terrestrial radiation (from ground): 0.28 mSv/year
? Natural radiation in the human body: 0.40 mSv/year
? Typical individual's natural background radiation: 2 mSv/year; 1.5 mSv/year for Australians, 3 mSv/year for Americans
? Radon in the average US home: 2 mSv/year
? Average American's total radiation exposure: 6.2 mSv/year
? New York-Tokyo flights for airline crew: 9 mSv/year
? Smoking 1.5 packs/day: 13 mSv/year Current average limit for nuclear workers: 20 mSv/year
? Background radiation in parts of Iran, India and Europe: 50 mSv/year
? Lowest clearly carcinogenic level: 100 mSv/year
Lifetime Dose Examples
? Criterion for relocation after Chernobyl disaster: 350 mSv/lifetime
Symptom Benchmarks
Effects to humans of acute radiation (within one day):
? 0–0.25 Sv: None
? 0.25–1 Sv: Some people feel nausea and loss of appetite; bone marrow, lymph nodes, spleen damaged.
? 1–3 Sv: Mild to severe nausea, loss of appetite, infection; more severe bone marrow, lymph node, spleen damage; recovery probable, not assured.
? 3–6 Sv: Severe nausea, loss of appetite; hemorrhaging, infection, diarrhea, skin peels, sterility; death if untreated.
? 6–10 Sv: Above symptoms plus central nervous system impairment; death expected.
? Above 10 Sv: Incapacitation and death.