Relative radiation effects: Frequent flier miles more dangerous than power plants?greenspun.com : LUSENET : TimeBomb 2000 (Y2000) : One Thread |
I've used this comparison before: than airline pilots and flight attendents get more radiation (from cosmic radiation) than allowed nuclear power plant operators), but I had not seen it in print before.This is from a UK study: results here are comparable: people in CO or UT (higher up) will get more radiation from the sky than I did working inside the shielding of the steel or concrete containment buildings at a nuclear power plant.
Now, remember, some amounts of radiation are natural, and if there were a catastrophic accident, obviously much, much more would be present near the accident than from cosmic radiation. This only talks about normal levels.
There are a couple of previous threads where this was discusssed in detail.. Also, how radiation behaves, how it can be prevented, and how it could be spread - and, more important, how it can be contained.
Look in the archives.
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It's easy to forget that the earths crust is radioactive.Work in a building with a lot of granite in the floors and walls? Your getting an extra chest X-ray or two of radiation per year.
Coal fired power plants bury 1100 lbs of Thorium every year in the fly ash. And that's what they scrubbed out of the stack. How much went into your air? Didn't read about that while you were worried about the leak of 10 millicuries of radioactive iodine from the local nuculear power plant did you.
Not to minimize the problems (and radioactive Iodine can be a problem) but sometimes it needs to be put into perspective.
-- LM (latemarch@usa.net), December 10, 1999.
Just WHAT is this dude saying...that those of us who stockpile Brazil Nuts will glow in the dark???
-- K. Stevens (kstevens@ It's ALL going away in January.com), December 10, 1999.
No, no.Only that you get some radiation from the Brazil nuts internally as they passed through your system .....
On one of our surface ships I was on a (long time ago) - the captain and executive officer received more radiation on their exposure meters - because they were topside, closer to the cosmic radiation, near the bridge above the steel decks and reactor shielding - than the nuclear operators did.
The nukes were down lower in the ship, well below decks and so had more shielding.
-- Robert A. Cook, PE (Marietta, GA) (cook.r@csaatl.com), December 10, 1999.
but of course since all these frequent flyers are travelling closer to the speed of light than stationary persons, they do not age as fast.I'm sure this tradeoff is more than enough to offset the potential harmful effects of increased cosmic radiation. ;^)
-- plonk! (realaddress@hotmail.com), December 10, 1999.