Contribution of radioactive particles to the post-explosion exposure of atomic bomb survivors implied from their stable chromosome aberration rates.

Front Public Health

Department of Radiation Biophysics, Research Institute for Radiation Biology and Medicine, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima, Japan.

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Nearly 80 years after the A-bomb was dropped, debates continue about the radiation doses received by survivors, particularly the neutron doses which are harder to evaluate accurately.
  • Initial measurements of airborne kerma radiation are reliable, but post-explosion exposure from radioactive particles has been largely overlooked due to uncertainties in their behavior.
  • Research indicates that indoor survivors may have experienced over 30% higher radiation exposure due to a higher production of neutron-induced radioactive particles in enclosed environments near the blast's hypocenter.

Article Abstract

Even today when nearly 80 years have passed after the atomic bomb (A-bomb) was dropped, there are still debates about the exact doses received by the A-bomb survivors. While initial airborne kerma radiation (or energy spectrum of emitted radiation) can be measured with sufficient accuracy to assess the radiation dose to A-bomb survivors, it is not easy to accurately assess the neutron dose including appropriate weighting of neutron absorbed dose. Particularly, possible post-explosion exposure due to the radioactive particles generated through neutron activation have been almost neglected so far, mainly because of a large uncertainty associated to the behavior of those particles. However, it has been supposed that contribution of such non-initial radiation exposure from the neutron-induced radioactive particles could be significant, according to the findings that the stable chromosomal aberration rates which indicate average whole-body radiation doses were found to be more than 30% higher for those exposed indoors than for those outdoors even at the same initial dose estimated for the Life Span Study. In this Mini Review article, the authors explain that such apparently controversial observations can be reasonably explained by assuming a higher production rate of neutron-induced radioactive particles in the indoor environment near the hypocenter.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10827992PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1335097DOI Listing

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