BELIEVE ME NOT! - - A SKEPTICs GUIDE
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The basic unit of radiation dose used to be the
``rad,'' defined in terms of the energy deposited
by ionizing radiation per unit mass of
exposed matter (e.g. flesh or bone):
(g means gram here.)
More recently, for some reason this nice mnemonic unit
has been officially supplanted by yet another
``personal name SI unit''
in honour of British physicist and radiation biologist
Louis Harold Gray (1905-1965) -
the ``gray:''
Early work on radiation hazards was based on X-ray
exposure8
and the units used were always rntgen
(after the scientist by that name), which are about the
same as rad for X-rays only, and are
virtually unused today. Later it was found that even
the rad was too simple; different types
of radiation (e.g. neutrons) were found to be more (or less)
destructive than X-rays for different types of tissues,
so an empirical ``fudge factor'' called the
Relative Biological Effectiveness (RBE) was invented
to account for these differences (averaged over all
body parts, of course, which decreased its usefulness).
The RBEs of -rays, X-rays and -rays
(fast electrons) are all 1 by definition;
thermal neutrons have an average RBE of 3;
fast neutrons (on average),
protons and -rays (4He nuclei) all have RBEs
of 10; and fast heavy ions have an RBE of 20.9
A new unit was then constructed by combining the RBE
with the dosage in rads, namely the rem
(rntgen equivalent to man), defined by
The ``R'' in the preceding paragraph stands for rem
and the ``mR'' for millirem - one thousandth
of a rem.
Today the standard international unit for measuring ``effective dosage''
is the seivert, named after Rolf Sievert (1898-1966),
a pioneering Swedish radiation physicist.
Converting between rem and seivert is just like
converting between rad and gray:
Now that all mnemonic content has been deleted from
the names of the units associated with radiation dosage,
you may expect these names to stick.10
Next: Effects
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Jess H. Brewer
1999-11-05