Background Radiation: How Much Radiation Do We Experience on Earth?

Why Do We Fear Radiation? 5

Australia experiences low background levels of nuclear radiation.

The most variation in background levels in Australia results from higher levels of radon due to the geology of an area. ARPANSA has produced a map that can be easily accessed for those wanting to know more. https://www.arpansa.gov.au/understanding-radiation/radiation-sources/more-radiation-sources/radon-map

Some areas of the world have much higher background levels, some patches being one hundred times higher than the world average. In general terms, multiple studies have suggested that long term residents of these higher background areas do not suffer from higher rates of cancer or heart disease. They may even develop extra protective measures. I will provide more information on this topic some of which can be controversial, in later blogs.

Background Radiation Dose Rate in mSv/day. Graph by Jack Devaney

Not all background data is easily available in mSv. Some interesting facts may be shown in other units such as grays. For X-rays, gamma rays and beta emitters, the gray is numerically the same value when expressed in sieverts, but for alpha particles one gray is equivalent to 20 sieverts, as a radiation weighting factor is applied accordingly. Alpha particles are easy to stop but once in the body, they inflict more damage.

When radiation is measured using instruments like a geiger counter, the unit is becquerels (Bq). One becquerel is equal to one nuclear decay per second.  Conversions from becquerels to mSv can be done accurately for a single radionuclide but mixtures are very complex. For reference to the figure below, there are one thousand trillion becquerels in a Petabequerel, an almost unimaginable number. The overall message is clear. Human influence on background levels is small. As large as the effect of the dreadful nuclear bomb testing was, it is relatively tiny fraction of the total and diminishes every year.

I first saw this posted by Robert Hargraves and again recently on a post by Oscar L Martin on LinkedIn.


Discover more from My Blog has become My Nuclear Journey

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

2 thoughts on “Background Radiation: How Much Radiation Do We Experience on Earth?”

  1. Your blog gets better and better. Have you come across the data about resistance to cancer in animals living within the Chernobyl exclusion zone and the suggestion that low dose radiation can re-set the immune system?
    Howard

    Like

    1. I am currently researching and writing about the animals of Chenobyl. Yes, I have read papers about low dose radiation and cancer. Early papers about the animals of Chalumbin just called the changes mutations and tended to be negative. This is changing with time and changes are now seen even by the same researchers as positive and protective. Unfortunately, due to the Russian/Ukraine war the Exclusion zone is currently blocked to ecological research teams. Thanks for your comment.

      Like

Leave a comment