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topic 5 radioactivity
nuclear radiation
background radiation and radiation
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Fiki akinsanya
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Cards (17)
Background radiation
Radiation that is around us all of the time
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Sources of background radiation
Natural sources such as rocks and
cosmic rays
from space and man-made sources such as the fallout from
nuclear weapons testing
and
nuclear accidents
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Factors affecting exposure to background radiation
Location and
occupation
among other things
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Activity
The number of
decays
per second from an
unstable
nucleus
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Becquerel
(Bq)
The
SI
unit for activity
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Why activity is unsuitable to measure radiation exposure
The activity of two sources could be the same, but one could emit
alpha
whereas the other emits
beta
(so they would each have a different effect on a person)
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When alpha radiation is more dangerous to a person than beta
When the
radioactive
source is inside the body
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Why alpha radiation is more dangerous to a person than beta when inside the body
An
alpha particle
is more ionising and it cannot penetrate the skin so will not be able to escape from the body
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When beta radiation is more dangerous to a person than alpha
When the
radioactive
source is outside the body
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Why beta radiation is more dangerous to a person than alpha when outside the body
A
beta particle
is less ionising but it can penetrate the skin so will be able to pass into the body
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Radiation dose
A measure of the amount of damage that would be caused by the absorption of
1 joule
of energy per
kilogram
of body mass
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Sievert (Sv)
The SI unit for radiation dose
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Millisievert
(mSv)
A more commonly used unit for radiation dose, as absorption is usually less than
1 Sv
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1 sievert (Sv) is equal to _____ millisieverts (mSv)
1,000
millisieverts (mSv)
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Radiation dose from eating a banana
Approx.
0.00001
mSv
(if it contains
radioactive
potassium)
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Radiation dose from 3 months on the ISS (International Space Station)
40
mSv
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Typical radiation dose that can lead to death
10 Sv
(
10,000
mSv)
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