Description
Radioactivity
What it is and what is does
Author: WILES Donald R.
Language: EnglishSubjects for Radioactivity:
Publication date: 06-2009
150 p. · 17x24.5 cm · Paperback
150 p. · 17x24.5 cm · Paperback
Description
/li>Contents
/li>Readership
/li>Biography
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A number of good textbooks on radiochemistry have been published for experts and advanced students, but very few are written for the general public and the nonspecialist. Those that exist are mostly written either by opponents of nuclear power or by those invested in the industry. This book takes no stand on the political controversy surrounding nuclear power, the facts are presented with no sermon attached, and anecdotes from the author's vast experience in the field provide a more personal insight into this complex subject. He gives detailed descriptions of several serious nuclear accidents, including that at Chernobyl. While the author's perspective is primarily Canadian, the descriptions and illustrations are relevant for readers in any country. In the final chapter, the author asks the question, "Are we completely safe?" The answer, intriguingly, is "I hope not." Read on to see why.
Chapter 1 Radioactivity: What It Is The Nucleus Some Unstable Nuclei What
Is Radiation Like? How Is Radiation Damaging? Measurement of Radiation The
Biological Action of Radiation Chapter 2 Industrial and Scientific
Applications of Radiation Industrial Uses of Radiation Scientific Uses of
Radiation and Radionuclides Atomic Movement in Solids Radioactive Dating
Chapter 3 Medical and Health Applications of Radiation Medical Uses
Scanning Radiation Treatment of Tumours Notes on Other Health Applications
Sterilization of Medical Supplies Irradiation of Food, Pests and Cosmetics
Chapter 4 Nuclear Fission and Nuclear Reactor Nuclear Fission What Is
Nuclear Power? Reactors of the World Experimental Reactors What Can Go
Wrong in a Nuclear Reactor? Chapter 5 Radioactivity in the Environment
Natural Background Radiation Man-Made Radionuclides The Environmental
Migration of Radionuclides What Can We Do About It? Chapter 6 Who Is
Watching? What Are the Limits? Who Is in Charge? Atmospheric Monitoring
Chapter 7 Major Nuclear Accidents The Anatomy of an Accident Accidents
That Have Happened What We Have Learned Chapter 8 Nuclear Waste Disposal
What Is Nuclear Waste, and Where Is It Kept? What Can We Do for the
Future? Nuclear Fuel Waste Disposal in Other Countries Additional Forms of
Nuclear Waste Chapter 9 Are We Completely Safe Now? Potential Dangers A
Final Thought Appendix I Some Radionuclides Used in Medicine and Industry
Appendix II Some Useful Mathematical Derivations Appendix III Bibliography
and References Appendix IV Glossary Index
This book is written for anyone who is interested in understanding one of the more pressing problems of our current times: the management of radioactivity and the public perception of its danger.
Donald R. Wiles has been teaching radiochemistry for many years at Carleton University in Ottawa. After his first job purifying radium in Port Hope, Ontario, he spent several years working on nuclear fission at McMaster University, MIT and Oslo. Among his scientific and technical publications, he has also published a book entitled The Chemistry of Nuclear Fuel Waste Disposal (Presses internationales Polytechnique, 2002).
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