> 19 Becquerel is quite weak.
Isn't it just?
I'm glad you picked that up as 1.9 MBq through up to 750 MBq is more of the range I would have expected for a mining instrumentation source [1].
I'm guessing both the The Guardian [2] and AAP [3] relied on the same reporter who missed fact checking and an M (and possibly a decimal place) when interviewing the W.Australian Health minister (who, of course, may have bumbled that himself).
The W.Australian official press release avoided details [4].
Take note when going forward in your career as there'll likely be some moment of unexpected public relations in the future.
Any thoughts on the "full quote" ?
Chief Health Officer Andrew Robertson said the small silver cylinder was a 19-becquerel caesium 137 ceramic source commonly used in radiation gauges.
“That may not mean a lot to people but probably more concerning is that it does emit a reasonable amount of radiation,” he said.
Dr Robertson said the unit emits about two millisieverts of radiation per hour, which is the equivalent of having 10 x-rays in an hour.
“Two millisieverts is also the amount of natural radiation we would receive in a year just by walking around,” he said.
“This is a source we have to be very careful of … It is quite a large radiation dose.”
It's one thing to drop an M in MBq, another to get x-ray equivilants incorrect, so does this sound about ballpark to you?
I confess to a distaste for Sieverts as a per kilo absorbed dose (or is that Grays) as its kind of subjective to target rather than source properties (as the source may be partially shielded by lead, water, etc.)
Moving on, 700 k counts / minute background (or 12 k counts/sec for those of us working in one second over lapped accumulation windows) sounds ballpark.
The interesting twist on the source, though, is it might be shaped in the sense of having a wrapper of lead (say) with an aperture of preference to direct the radiation preferentially.
> I neglected here that not all gamma rays that reach the detector actually will leave a signal in the detector.
For at least two reasons, 'eh?
* Not all gammas passing through the crystal will cause a flash (you covered by implication), AND
* Not all flashes will be counted (oft neglected) as the scintillation counters get saturated by single events and need to recover, they also fluff damn near simultaneous multiple events as singles (all this dependant on scintillation detection equipment).
> Hope that gives you an idea how you can estimate these types of questions.
I was very interested to hear your reasoning, I appreciate it and I hope your comment gets a few eyeballs, although HN moving on apace as it does, who knows?
> Forgot to mention the radon. Usually you do not measure much radon unless it rains. It is mostly a dessert there so I don't think that should be an issue
Hmm. You might want to look into this further I suspect.
My poor understanding is that rainstorm fronts drop the barometric pressure which draws radon gas from the cracks and crevasses in which the gas has already been expressed from the rock sources.
So, yes, there is an increase in radon gas where radon gas is normally expressed due to pressure drops.
However, in a hypothetical environment with no pressure changes .. radon continues to be expressed if it is being created.
I've found, in my humble experience, that even on clear days rain free days in Western Australia radon is thick on valley floors in those areas that have it in the still of the mornings, and gone later in the afternoon as the winds increase and clear the heavy ground hugging gases.
I would suggest that radon is a function more of geology and topography .. modified in variance by air pressure and wind conditions.
In any case, thank you for your response, I look forward to any further thoughts you may have, and, in closing, you may enjoy this entertaining A0 wall map [5] .. or perhaps the larger raw datasets (also available) [6]
[1] https://inis.iaea.org/collection/NCLCollectionStore/_Public/...
[2] https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/jan/28/missi...
[3] https://www.aap.com.au/news/search-for-radioactive-capsule-i...
[4] https://ww2.health.wa.gov.au/Media-releases/2023/January/Sea...
[5] https://ecat.ga.gov.au/geonetwork/srv/api/records/a05f7892-f...
[6] https://www.ga.gov.au/scientific-topics/disciplines/geophysi...