hazards & uses of radioactive emissions and background radiation

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11 Terms

1
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give 4 sources of background radiation

  1. rocks

  2. cosmic rays from space

  3. nuclear weapon testing

  4. nuclear accidents

2
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how should background radiation be dealt with in calculations?

the background count should be subtracted from any readings before calculations (half life etc.) are attempted

3
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what is the unit used to measure radiation dosage?

Sieverts (Sv)

4
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how many millisieverts equal 1 sievert?

1000 millisieverts = 1 sievert

5
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why might the radiation dosage that different people experience differ?

  • some occupations involve working with radiation

  • background radiation differs with location due to things such as the locality of nuclear power stations or radiation related testing

6
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what factor determines how dangerous a particular radioactive isotope is?

the half-life of the isotope

7
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why are isotopes with long half-lives particularly harmful?

  • they remain radioactive for much longer periods of time

  • they must be stored in specific ways to avoid humans and the environment from being exposed to radiation for too long

8
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state 2 uses of nuclear radiation in the field of medicine

  1. examining of internal organs

  2. controlling and destroying unwanted tissue

9
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how is radiation used in sterilisation?

gamma emitters are used to kill bacteria/parasites on equipment

10
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explain the process of radiotherapy

  • gamma emitters direct gamma rays at the cancerous cells

  • the cancerous cells absorb the radiation and are killed

11
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how are medical tracers chosen?

they should have a short half life and decay into a stable isotope which can be excreted.

they should only release gamma radiation since it is weakly ionising and can easily pass through body tissue without damaging it