Difference between revisions of "Rad (metric)"

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| 0.001 rads / [[hour]]
 
| 0.001 rads / [[hour]]
 
| Dental x-ray
 
| Dental x-ray
 +
 +
No negative long term effects.
 
|-
 
|-
 
| 0.01 rads / [[hour]]
 
| 0.01 rads / [[hour]]
 
| cChest x-ray
 
| cChest x-ray
 +
 +
No negative long term effects.
 
|-
 
|-
 
| 10 rads / [[hour]]
 
| 10 rads / [[hour]]
| (Airborne fallout as a result of a detonated [[thunderball]] device)
+
| Airborne fallout as a result of a detonated [[thunderball]] device.
  
 
Radiation sickness, nausea, eventual recovery likely
 
Radiation sickness, nausea, eventual recovery likely
 
|-
 
|-
 
| 1000 rads / [[hour]]
 
| 1000 rads / [[hour]]
| (Within the crater of a detonated [[thunderball]] device)
+
| Within the crater of a detonated [[thunderball]] device.
  
 
Organ failure, death within [[hour]]s
 
Organ failure, death within [[hour]]s
 
|-
 
|-
 
| 400,000 rads / [[hour]]
 
| 400,000 rads / [[hour]]
| (Within the magnetosphere of a [[large gas giant]])
+
| Within the magnetosphere of a [[large gas giant]].
  
 
Rapid organ failure, death within [[minute]]s
 
Rapid organ failure, death within [[minute]]s

Revision as of 10:41, 20 March 2019

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A rad is a unit of measurement of radiation.

Description (Specifications)

A unit of absorbed dose of ionizing radiation equal to an energy of 0.1 newtons per gram of irradiated material.

  • 1 rad is equal to 10 millisieverts
  • The common Imperial usage is simply rad: the name is short enough to make an abbreviation unnecessary.

The rad is related to the millisievert, a unit measuring the radiation dose defined as that producing the same biologic effect in a specified tissue as 1 gray of high-energy x-rays received either from a radioactive source or from other sources such as medical procedures.

  • A millisievert is generally a whole body effective dose, but it may also be an equivalent dose received by a particular tissue or organ.
  • The common Imperial abbreviation is mSv.

A Radiation Counter is able to measure the local ambient radiation levels.

Term Usage Example

A Fission power plant may produce hundreds of rads per hour.

History & Background (Dossier)

Effects on health are observed only beyond 10 rads (100 mSv), though long term exposure to substantially lower levels of radiation still presents a severe risk to health. It takes a dose of hundreds of rads to cause injuries that can be fatal in the short term.

The rad was first defined as a unit of measurement on Terra prior to the foundation of the Terran Confederation. Technologists found the rad useful as the concept of the Technology Level and standardized ideas about sophont society development began to take form.[1]

Generalized Rad Level Table

Rad Levels
Exposure Effect
0.001 rads / hour Dental x-ray

No negative long term effects.

0.01 rads / hour cChest x-ray

No negative long term effects.

10 rads / hour Airborne fallout as a result of a detonated thunderball device.

Radiation sickness, nausea, eventual recovery likely

1000 rads / hour Within the crater of a detonated thunderball device.

Organ failure, death within hours

400,000 rads / hour Within the magnetosphere of a large gas giant.

Rapid organ failure, death within minutes

References & Contributors (Sources)

This list of sources was used by the Traveller Wiki Editorial Team and individual contributors to compose this article. Copyrighted material is used under license from Mongoose Publishing or by permission of the author. The page history lists all of the contributions.
  1. Information provided to the library by Maksim-Smelchak