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Personal Radiation Dose IONIZING AND NON-IONIZING RADIATION Non-ionizing: Carries LESS energy Can only excite the water molecule. Ionizing: Carries MORE energy than 1216 kJ/mol Can remove an electron from a water molecule
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Strips an electron from a molecule Molecule becomes positively charged. Can cause the formation of free radicals
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Contain an unpaired valence-shell electron and are extremely reactive. Destroy biologically active molecules Either remove electrons or removing hydrogen atoms from them. Damage the membrane, nucleus, chromosomes, or mitochondria of the cell; this inhibits cell division results in cell death produces a malignant cell.
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Alpha Nuclei of Helium Charge = +2 Stopped by a piece of paper Beta Beta- (electron emission) Beta + (positron emission or electron capture) Positron They cause most damage when they are emitted inside the human body.
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Less ionizing Damage includes burns and cancer through mutations
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Dangerous in direct exposure (degree of danger is a subject of debate) Animals (including humans) can also be exposed to ionizing radiation internally if radioactive isotopes are present in the environment, they may be taken into the body. Example: radioactive iodine is treated as normal iodine by the body and used by the thyroid its accumulation there often leads to thyroid cancer.
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Principal Effect of low doses: to induce cancers which don’t manifest for 20 years Principal Effect of high doses: More immediate effects Cells that are actively dividing are more susceptible to radiation exposure Bone marrow & skin more likely to sustain injury than the central nervous system or the kidneys.
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Has enough energy to make the atoms in a molecule vibrate, but not remove electrons Large ranges: UV, visible light, infrared, microwaves, radio waves, and other low frequency waves. Thought to be essentially harmless below the frequencies that cause heating.
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At low-energy end of the electromagnetic spectrum: (radio waves and microwaves) Excites the movement of atoms and molecules, which is equivalent to heating the sample. In or near the visible portion of the spectrum: Excites electrons into higher-energy orbitals. When the electron eventually falls back to a lower-energy state, excess energy is given off to neighboring molecules in the form of heat. Principal effect of non-ionizing radiation = increase in the temperature of the system.
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Non-Ionizing: 7 moles of photons of visible light Ionizing: 300 joules of x-ray or gamma-ray radiation lethal Even though it only raises the temperature of the body 0.001°C! Internally, alpha particle radiation is even more dangerous; a dose equivalent to only 15 joules is fatal for the average human; 7 x 10 -10 moles of the particles emitted by alpha particles of 238 U is fatal. Polonium-210 (alpha emitter) suspected in lung, bladder cancer related to tobacco smoking!
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Kill cancerous cells Generate electricity Problem: waste produces ionizing radiation Radiography—enhancing images that are hard to capture, such as inside the body. Irradiating food Medical sterilization Sterile insect technique
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