File TXT tidak ditemukan.
Transcript preview
Open
Kind: captions Language: en Radiation has been in the news a lot lately, but the term radiation has just been thrown around loosely to mean anything potentially damaging coming away from a nuclear power plant. So, what are people worried about? That it's going to like explode and release radiation. But you don't know what's leaking or radiation. I don't think they actually know what they're worried about getting out of the reactor. So, I want to clear up this confusion between radiation on the one hand and the radioactive atoms that release it on the other. The radiation is the stuff, anything that radiates out from a nucleus. We call it nuclear radiation. Makes sense. And that's the stuff that can actually do damage to your molecules and cells. I have a source here which releases uh beta particles. And I have a geer counter which makes a click every time it it gets hit by a bit of radiation. So you can see that there is a lot of radiation coming from the source right now. It's actually not that much but you know it sounds like a lot. But what I want to point out is that as I move the Geiger counter away from the source the radiation very quickly falls off. A lot of this radiation can't really pass through air. What are we worried about like coming out of the plant? I guess the um probably the alpha particles really. But you're saying the alpha particles can't get that far? No, they can't. But so why are we worried about them? They're just going to like die when the beta particles. They can the alpha and beta radiation can be absorbed by next to nothing. Doesn't radiation drop off proportionately as it goes along? Like and and it's not a linear relationship, but it's more of a negative exponential relationship. So, if the radiation can't go very far, why are we worried about it? Well, the truth is we're not worried about the radiation itself. We're worried about the radioactive atoms that release it. So, we're worried about the stuff in here. In a nuclear power plant, there's a lot of radioactive atoms that can escape into the atmosphere, into the environment in the case of an explosion. And it is those radioactive atoms that we're concerned about. These radioactive atoms can be spread in the atmosphere over hundreds of kilometers. And they can effectively coat everything with a a blanket of this radioactive dust. Then you breathe it in or you eat it. And it's at that point when the radioactive atom is inside you that it releases its radiation in a damaging way because then the radiation is delivered directly to your cells and it can cause damage to your molecules and cells which can lead to uh to health problems later on. So it's not really radiation that we're worried about directly seeping out through the walls of nuclear power plants. It's the radioactive material, the radioactive atoms inside that we're worried about escaping um and then doing damage once they have reached us.
Resume
Categories