Abstract

All living things are constantly exposed to background radiation. The presence of radioactive materials in the earth's crust and cosmic radiation are largely responsible for this exposure. The present study aimed to develop a new methodology of easy applicability and low cost to carry out measurements of environmental background radiation and to be able to establish a map of environmental radiation for primary monitoring of these exposures. For that, ionizing radiation measurements, Meteorological and Radiometric measurements were performed. Geiger Mueller Counter (GM) was used, as it is widely used in services that use radioactive sources and research centers. Measurements obtained showed that there were no statistically significant changes in the 24 hours of measurements with the GM, in relation to the variations presented in the Meteorological and Radiometric measurements that changed according to the time of day. The average value of the background radiation readings was 0.0194 mR/h, with an average variance of 1.8E-06 and an average standard deviation of 1.35E-03. GM proved to be useful for primary measurement of background radiation. The map was developed using open source libraries for the Python programming language. The map may be hosted on an open access website, so that professionals, students and researchers may contribute, sending new data from different locations. It is essential that the levels of radiation exposure are demonstrated and understood. Easy access to this information may contribute to health organizations, agriculture and research centers to establish a baseline for future research.

Highlights

  • There are several types of ionizing radiation, and their characteristics vary according to the origin of production, ionization power and interaction

  • The natural origin of radiation occurs due to the presence of naturally radioactive chemical elements, with the greatest contribution coming from the decay products of Uranium and Thorium, in which the most notable are Radon and Thoron, with a small portion coming from C-14 and K-40

  • The levels of ionizing radiation for surveillance of environmental radiation in Botucatu clearly are the first scale of the detector, which means that either the levels are lower than the equipment can read or it is a value closer the initial scale value, either way this data will serve as a base line for future measurements

Read more

Summary

Introduction

There are several types of ionizing radiation, and their characteristics vary according to the origin of production, ionization power and interaction. The natural origin of radiation occurs due to the presence of naturally radioactive chemical elements, with the greatest contribution coming from the decay products of Uranium and Thorium, in which the most notable are Radon and Thoron, with a small portion coming from C-14 and K-40. These radioactive families are present in rocks, water, air and soil, and can be gaseous and spread with winds, rain and air humidity [3,4,5]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call