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Journal Articles

Airborne radiation survey after the accident

Torii, Tatsuo*; Sanada, Yukihisa

Behavior of Radionuclides in the Environment III; Fukushima, p.17 - 29, 2022/00

Airborne radiation survey was conducted to evaluate the influence of radionuclides emitted by the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (FDNPP) accident. Carrying out airborne radiation surveys using a manned helicopter, the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) has developed and established an analysis method concurrently with the development of this survey method. In particular, because the background radiation level differs greatly between the East and West regions of Japan, the JAEA has developed a discrimination method for natural radionuclide and cosmic rays using the gamma energy spectra. The reliability of the airborne radiation monitoring data was confirmed through comparison with large amounts of ground measurement data. Here, we report on the measurement technique and the results. The ambient dose rate has been decreased by the increasing attenuation effect due to radioactive cesium penetration into the soil in addition to the physical decay of radioactive cesium. These results indicate the importance of airborne monitoring to evaluate and predict the radiation exposure of residents.

Oral presentation

Feasibility study on the application of Monte Carlo simulations to airborne radiological survey for the estimation of atmospheric radon and its progenies

Koh, S.*; Hirao, Shigekazu*; Torii, Tatsuo; Sanada, Yukihisa

no journal, , 

Studies of atmospheric processes frequently make use of Rn-222, an inert radioactive gas with a half-life of 3.82 days widely found in the atmosphere. There are few measurements of Rn-222 at high altitudes, and there is limited knowledge of its regional behaviour. Rn-222 decay products in the air interfere with aerial radiological survey (ARS) carried out since the Fukushima Daiichi NPP accident intended to quantify the spatial and temporal dispersion of surface radiation from Fukushima derived radionuclides. The purpose of this study is to investigate the feasibility of using ARS data to estimate the concentration to Rn-222 in the atmosphere.

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