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{{comic
 
{{comic
 +
| number    =
 
| date      = March 19, 2011
 
| date      = March 19, 2011
 
| title    = Radiation
 
| title    = Radiation
 
| image    = radiation.png
 
| image    = radiation.png
| titletext = Click to view full
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| titletext =
| lappend  = 2011/03/19/radiation-chart
 
| ldomain  = blog
 
| extra    = yes
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
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[[Category:Charts]]
* The full-size version of this chart can be found here: http://xkcd.com/radiation/.
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A larger version of this picture can be found here: [http://xkcd.com/radiation/ http://xkcd.com/radiation/].
* The original blog post "Radiation Chart" can be found here: http://blog.xkcd.com/2011/03/19/radiation-chart/.
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The original blog post "Radiation Chart" can be found here: [http://blog.xkcd.com/2011/03/19/radiation-chart/ http://blog.xkcd.com/2011/03/19/radiation-chart/]
* The additional blog post with updated commentary can be found here: http://blog.xkcd.com/2011/04/26/radiation-chart-update/.
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<div class="toclimit-3" style="float:right; margin-left: 10px;"> __TOC__ </div>
 
 
 
==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
This is a chart listing various sources of radiation and the amount of dosage in sieverts (a unit of absorbed radiation) you would receive. There is an image of squares next to each radiation source, which act as a representation for an amount of sieverts. The blue squares represent .05 micro sieverts each, the green squares represent  20 micro sieverts each, the red squares represent 10 milli sieverts each, and the yellow squares represent 1 sievert each.
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{{incomplete|Some features still not explained}}
 
 
This was released shortly after, and due to, the {{w|Tohoku Earthquake}} and the beginning of the crisis at the {{w|Fukushima nuclear plant}}.
 
 
 
The first section, the blue section, shows small dosages of radiation compared to 1 to 800 blue squares.
 
A much smaller version of the blue chart is shown in the green section to compare blue to green squares. The green section uses green squares in comparison to its radiation amounts, which are much larger than those listed on the blue section.
 
The red section uses red squares to compare its much more powerful radiation sources. It has a smaller revision of the green chart to compare green to red squares.
 
The yellow section compares yellow squares to a single source, the amount of radiation absorbed during ten minutes next to the Chernobyl reactor core after explosion and meltdown. It likewise features a small version of the red chart to compare yellow to red squares.
 
 
 
Randall points out the cell phones do not produce ionizing radiation, "unless it's a bananaphone". This is in reference to ''[[wikipedia:Bananaphone|Bananaphone]]'', a 1994 children's song by Raffi which, on the internet, saw its peak of memetic popularity in 2004. As noted in the blue chart, bananas give off less than a fraction of a micro-Sievert of radiation; thus, a phone that is also a banana would give off radiation (although the amount is unclear since people don't eat their phones).{{citation needed}}
 
 
 
Below the charts there is a conversion table comparing various squares to each other and their conversion rates.
 
Below that is various web sources that have just the urls listed, not in any official citation like MLA or APA.
 
 
 
Randal explains at the bottom that this chart is merely a rough guideline, and may have errors. Indeed, his sources that he listed have many typos and some are broken links.
 
 
 
It is likely that this comic was the inspiration for the much larger and more complex [[980: Money]] that came out later that year.
 
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
Line 39: Line 20:
 
:1 blue square: Sleeping next to someone (0.05 μSv)
 
:1 blue square: Sleeping next to someone (0.05 μSv)
 
:1.8 blue squares: Living within 50 miles of a nuclear power plant for a year (0.09 μSv)
 
:1.8 blue squares: Living within 50 miles of a nuclear power plant for a year (0.09 μSv)
:2 blue squares: Eating one banana (0.1 μSv)
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:2 blue squares: Eating one banana (0.1 μUsv)
 
:6 blue squares: Living within 50 miles of a coal power plant for a year (0.3 μSv)
 
:6 blue squares: Living within 50 miles of a coal power plant for a year (0.3 μSv)
 
:20 blue squares: Arm X-Ray (1 μSv)
 
:20 blue squares: Arm X-Ray (1 μSv)
Line 45: Line 26:
 
:100 blue squares: Dental x-ray (5 μSv)
 
:100 blue squares: Dental x-ray (5 μSv)
 
:200 blue squares: Background dose received by an average person over one normal day (10 μSv)
 
:200 blue squares: Background dose received by an average person over one normal day (10 μSv)
:800 blue squares: Airplane flight from New York to LA (40 μSv)
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:800 blue squares: Airplane flight from New York to LA (400 μSv)
 
 
:Note under blue section: Using a cell phone (0 μSv)-a cell phone's transmitter does not produce ionizing radiation* and does not cause cancer.
 
:*Unless it's a bananaphone.
 
  
 
:Green section:
 
:Green section:
 
:1 green square: Chest x-ray (20 μSv)
 
:1 green square: Chest x-ray (20 μSv)
:1.5 green squares: EPA yearly release target for a nuclear power plant (30 μSv)
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:3 green squares: All the does in the blue chart combined (~60 μSv)
:3 green squares: All the doses in the blue chart combined (~60 μSv)
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:2 green squares: Extra dose to Tokyo in weeks following Fukushima accident (40 μSv
:2 green squares: Extra dose to Tokyo in weeks following Fukushima accident (40 μSv)
 
 
:3.5 green squares: Living in a stone, brick, or concrete building for a year (70 μSv)
 
:3.5 green squares: Living in a stone, brick, or concrete building for a year (70 μSv)
 
:4 green squares: Average total dose from the Three Mile Island accident to someone living within 10 miles (80 μSv)
 
:4 green squares: Average total dose from the Three Mile Island accident to someone living within 10 miles (80 μSv)
Line 61: Line 38:
 
:19.5 green squares: Yearly dose from natural potassium in the body (390 μSv)
 
:19.5 green squares: Yearly dose from natural potassium in the body (390 μSv)
 
:20 green squares: Mammogram (400 μSv)
 
:20 green squares: Mammogram (400 μSv)
:50 green squares: EPA yearly limit on radiation exposure to a single member of the public (1 mSv=1,000 μSv)
 
:50 green squares: Maximum external dose from Three Mile Island accident (1 mSv)
 
:50 green squares: Typical dose over two weeks in Fukushima Exclusion Zone (1 mSv, but areas northwest saw far higher doses)
 
:100 green squares: Head CT Scan (2 mSv)
 
:200 green squares: Normal yearly background dose. About 85% is from natural sources. Nearly all the rest os from medical scans (~4 mSv)
 
:300 green squares: Dose from spending an hour on the grounds at the Chernobyl plant in 2010 (6 mSv in one spot, but varies wildly)
 
:350 green squares: Chest CT scan (7 mSv)
 
:2,500 green squares: Maximum yearly dose permitted for US radiation workers (50 mSv)
 
 
 
:Red section:
 
:4 red squares: Approximate total dose at one station at the north-west station of the Fukushima exclusion zone (40 mSv)
 
:5 red squares: Radiation worker one-year dose limit (50 mSv)
 
:7.5 red squares: All doses in green chart combined (~75 mSv)
 
:10 red squares: Lowest one-year dose clearly linked to increased cancer risk (100 mSv)
 
:18 red squares: Dose received by two Fukushima plant workers (~180 mSv)
 
:40 red squares: Dose causing symptoms of radiation poisoning if received in a short time (400 mSv, but it varies)
 
:200 red squares: severe radiation poisoning, in some cases fatal (2000 mSv, 2 Sv)
 
:400 red squares: Usually fatal radiation poisoning. Survival occassionally possible with prompt treatment (4 Sv)
 
:800 red squares: Fatal dose, even with treatment (8 Sv)
 
 
:Smaller section within red section:
 
:EPA guidelines for emergency situations, provided to ensure quick decision-making:
 
:10 red squares: Dose limit for emergency workers protecting valuable property (100 mSv)
 
:25 red squares: Dose limit for emergency workers in lifesaving operations (250 mSv)
 
 
:Yellow section:
 
:50 yellow squares: Ten minutes next to the Chernobyl reactor core after explosion and meltdown (50 Sv)
 
 
:Conversion charts:
 
:1 blue square equals (0.05 μSv)
 
:400 blue squares equal 1 green square (20 μSv)
 
:500 green squares equal 1 red square (10 mSv)
 
:100 red squares equal 1 yellow square (1 Sv)
 
  
:Sources:
 
:http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/cfr/part020/
 
:[https://nema.nebraska.gov/tech-hazard/radiation-dose-limits www.nema.ne.gov/technological/dose-limits.html]
 
:http://www.deq/idaho.gov/inl_oversight/radiation/dose_calculator.cfm
 
:http://www.deq/idaho.gov/inl_oversight/radiation/radiation_guide.cfm
 
:http://mitnse.com/
 
:http://www.bnl.gov/bnlweb/PDF/03SER/Chapter_8.pdf
 
:http://dels-old.nas.edu/dels/rpt_briefs/rerf_final.pdf
 
:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sievert
 
:http://blog.vornaskotti.com/2010/07/15/into-the-zone-chernobyl-pripyat/
 
:http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/fzact-sheets/tritium-radiation-fs.html
 
:http://www.mext.go.jp/component/a_menu/other/detail/))icsFiles/afieldfile/20011/03/18/1303723_1716.pdf
 
:http://radiology.rnsa.org/content/248/1/254
 
  
:Chart by Randal Munroe, with help from Ellen, Senior Reactor Operator at the Reed Research Reactor, who suggested the idea and provided a lot of the sources. I'm sure I've added in lots of mistakes; it's for general education only. If you're basing radiation safety procedures on an internet PNG image and things go wrong, you have no one to blame but yourself.
 
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
[[Category:Charts]]
 
[[Category:Large drawings]]
 
[[Category:Comics with color]]
 
[[Category:Comics with lowercase text]]
 

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