Radiological Assessment - of effects from - Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant April 18, 2011.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Bulk Survey for Release (BSFR) Program
Advertisements

Radiological Assessment March 29, AMS Summary Ops Summary – Aerial Measuring Systems totaled more than 130 hours of flying – Flight operations were.
Natural and Man-Made Radiation Sources Health Physics Society - Power Reactor Section Radiation Science Education.
Natural and Man-Made Radiation Sources
Med Phys 3A03/3AB2 Practical Health & Medical Physics Communications D.R. Chettle, with D.F. Moscu TA: Helen Moise.
Radiological Assessment March 25, AMS Summary 2 Ops Summary – Aerial Measurement Systems totaled more than 70 hours of flying – Flight operations.
Response to a nuclear plant incident in Wisconsin How a nuclear power plant incident could affect your county October 14, 2009.
DOE Response to Radiological Releases from the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant Daniel Blumenthal, PhD, CHP Manager, Consequence Management Program.
1 NRC Meteorologists Role in Support of the Headquarters Operations Center During an International Event Kevin Quinlan Physical Scientist, NRO U.S. Nuclear.
Title Here Title Here, Optional or Unit Identifier Nuclear Engineering Program Impact and Radiation Effects Resulting from the Nuclear Events in Japan.
Take in a Deep Breath! Blow It Out!!! Typical Annual Radiation Exposure mrem/yr.
Radiological Assessment - of effects from - Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant May 6, 2011.
The UK Approach - the Initial Radiological Assessment Methodology Laura Newsome Scientist – Environment Agency September 2009.
Understanding Radioactivity The Basics. This Course  This course is intended to provide a very basic understanding of radiation, radioactivity, and interacting.
The structure of nuclei Nuclei are composed of just two types of particles: protons and neutrons. These particles are referred to collectively as nucleons.
Radiological Assessment - of effects from - Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant May 13, 2011.
Cleaning up residential areas after a nuclear accident – Accident scenario Michael Ammann, STUK.
1 Radiological Effects Fukushima Dai-ichi Accident Jim Lynch NRC Region III August 24, 2011.
Environmental Health XIV. Standards and Monitoring Shu-Chi Chang, Ph.D., P.E., P.A. Assistant Professor 1 and Division Chief 2 1 Department of Environmental.
Radioactivity is invisible. Radioactivity is invisible. We are also unable to hear, taste, touch, or smell it. Yet we are able to detect and measure radioactivity.
Northwest Area Committee Meeting June 29, 2011 C. Terada, EPA Japan 2011 US National Radiation Monitoring.
Jed Harrison Office of Radiation & Indoor Air.  Review the Incident – What Happened  Describe the EPA Response  Review EPA’s RadNet Monitoring System.
EPA’s Response to Fukushima Japan Nuclear Emergency Mike Boyd, Senior Health Physicist EPA/Office of Radiation & Indoor Air Presented at 2011 OAS Annual.
Lecture 6 Review of Units used in Radiation Safety and Radiation Biology Assessment of Public Dose Unauthorized Use/Removal of Radioactive Materials Misadministrations.
Biological response and radiation safety practices
INDOOR AIR POLLUTION: RADON In 1990 EPA placed indoor air pollution at the top of the list of 18 sources of cancer risk Indoor pollution is rated by risk.
A Radiation Primer radiation … radioactive material What are they? exposure … contamination Are they the same?
[
Radon Overview Introduction: Radon and Radon Exposure Health Effects.
Radiation in Your Environment. Radiation Around You Nature –Cosmic (direct and cosmic-produced radioactivity –Terrestrial (including radon) Medical Consumer.
The Nucleus and Radioactivity
Nuclear _____________of atom is changed Particles or energy is absorbed or emitted from nucleus Can involve one atom or multiple atoms New elements can.
Distribution of natural radioactivity and radiological hazard in Saudi Arabia building material used in Jordan market By Mr. Ismail Abdul Aziz Mohammed.
Fundamentals of Radiation
Ronald Warren Ecological & Environmental Monitoring National Security Technologies, LLC Community Environmental Monitoring Program Workshop July 26, 2011.
James A. FitzPatrick NPP Ingestion Pathway Exercise May and June 21-23, 2011 and LHD Radiological Plan Template Kevin Kraus Associate Radiological.
Workshop U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Rockville, Maryland Pacific Northwest National Laboratory November 15-17, 2005 GENII Version 2.0 Overview and.
CRITICAL PATHWAY ANALYSIS FOR RADIOLOGICAL IMPACT CONTROL AND ASSESSMENT Riaz Akber
ANALYTICAL X-RAY SAFETY User Training Centre for Environmental Health, Safety and Security Management.
Internal Radiation Dosimetry Lab 9. Radiation Measurement We use different terms depending on whether: 1.The radiation is coming from a radioactive source.
Take in a Deep Breath! Blow It Out!!! Typical Annual Radiation Exposure mrem/yr.
Basic Survey: External dose estimation Radiation Medical Science Center for the Fukushima Health Management Survey, Fukushima Medical University The International.
Radioactivity Part 2 Nuclear Chemistry
Intervention for Chronic and Emergency Exposure Situations Assessment and Response during Radiological Emergency Dose Assessment Overview Lecture IAEA.
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Emergency Response Protective Actions Day 10 – Lecture 3.
Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant Event Summary and FPL/DAEC Actions.
Infinite is Enhancement of the functions of the Japan Atomic Energy Agency Library’s Fukushima Nuclear Accident Archive using a novel data flagging system.
FUKISHIMA Nuclear Reactors Radiological Assessment Air Measurement Surveillance AMS March 22,
Radiological Assessment March 22, AMS Summary 2 Ops Summary – Aerial Measurement Systems totaled more than 40 hours of flying Plot interpretation.
Part 1d: Exposure Assessment and Modeling Thomas Robins, MD, MPH.
Pb-210 and fly ash particles as indicators of industrial impact in peatlands Taavi Vaasma, Helen Karu, Madis Kiisk, Margus Pensa, Alan Henry Tkaczyk University.
CONSEQUENCE ASSESSMENT. Consequence Assessment Definition: The analysis, evaluation, and interpretation of available information associated with an actual.
ASSESSMENT OF OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE DUE TO INTAKE OF RADIONUCLIDES
Radon Radioactive gas in your home? What is radon? Radon is radioactive Radon is radioactive It decays and emits an alpha particle It decays and emits.
Radiological Assessment April 4, AMS Summary Ops Summary – Aerial Measuring Systems have totaled more than 221 flight hours in support of aerial.
Radiological Assessment - of effects from - Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant April 7, 2011.
RER/9/111: Establishing a Sustainable National Regulatory Infrastructure for Nuclear and Radiation Safety TCEU School of Drafting Regulations November.
1 BROOKHAVEN SCIENCE ASSOCIATES NSLS-II Shielding Workshop R. Casey Activation Issues for NSLS-II March 28, 2007.
Nuclear Radiation Today Chapter 10.3 Notes. Where is radiation? Radiation is everywhere—the form of nuclear radiation that occurs naturally is called.
Radiation and Magnuson Park Al Conklin Senior Health Physicist Office of Radiation Protection.
Wed/Thurs Dec 3-4 Objective: Calculate the radiation exposure of different people. Checkpoint: How much radiation (in mSv) is a cancer risk? How much radiation.
1 Health Safety & Radiation Protection (RAD453) Course : بسم الله الرّحمن الرّحيم Chapter 3: Sources of Radiation Omrane KADRI, Ph.D.
Japanese Nuclear Accident And U.S. Response April 20, 2011.
Radiological impacts from nuclear industrial facilities on the public and the environment : Their magnitude and the next 50 years forecast Sylvain Saint-Pierre.
PAG Manual Revision Update and Next Steps
Update on EPA Regulatory and Guidance Activities
SAFETY AND SITTING ASSESSMENT FOR NPPs DEPLOYMENT IN INDONESIA
Allen Chan U.S. Government Accountability Office October 2, 2018
Warm Up Crew members and passengers on overseas flights are exposed to elevated levels of cosmic ray radiation. A 2002 paper reported a mean radiation.
Radiological Assessment March 22, 2011
Presentation transcript:

Radiological Assessment - of effects from - Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant April 18, 2011

Aerial Measuring Systems have totaled more than 334 flight hours in support of aerial monitoring operations NNSA’s Consequence Management Response Teams have collected approximately 150,000 total field measurements taken by DOE, DoD, and Japanese monitoring assets 504 total air samples taken at US facilities throughout Japan undergoing lab analysis in the US Operations Summary

First Year Dose Estimate

4 4 Guide to Interpretation First-Year Dose Estimate commencing March 16, 2011: Map shows the radiation dose that would be received by people in the first year following the release of radioactive material from the Fukushima Daiichi plant. First-Year 2 rem Threshold People who did not evacuate this area before the releases occurred would be expected to receive 2 rem or greater dose if they remain in that area for one year following the release. This area is indicated by red. Those that did evacuate the red area prior to plant release (prior to 16 March) would be expected to receive less than a 2 rem dose. First-Year 100 millirem Threshold People who did not evacuate this area before the releases occurred would be expected to receive 100 millirem or greater dose if they remain in that area for one year following the release. This area is indicated by blue. Assumptions This dose estimate is conservative and assumes no dose reduction factor for spending time indoors. This dose estimate takes into account radioactive decay of the source material. This dose estimate includes the effects of external radiation due to material deposited on the ground and inhalation of re-suspended radioactive particles. Notes Based on 10 fixed-wing aerial surveys Dose conversion factor (DCF) computed for each flight to account for decay Computed dose based on NRC-supplied radionuclide mix, consistent with results to date for nuclides that have been measured

5 Assessment An assessment of measurements gathered through April 17 continues to show: Radiation levels continue to decrease No measurable deposit of radiological material since March 19 US bases and facilities all measure dose rates below 32 microrem/hr (32 millionths of a REM) – a level with no known health risks Agricultural monitoring and possible intervention will be required for several hundred square kilometers surrounding the site: Soil and water samples are the only definitive method to determine agricultural countermeasures Ground monitoring can give better fidelity to identify areas that require agricultural sampling

Context The Nuclear Regulatory Commission estimates that the average American absorbs 620 mRem a year* (or mRem/hour) An average transatlantic flight produces an exposure of 2.5 mRem* A typical chest x-ray produces 10 mRem per image EPA guidelines call for public health actions if exposure exceeds 1000 mRem over 4 days * Source: NRC: