Radiation vs Radioactive Atoms

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 938

  • @rdoetjes
    @rdoetjes Před 9 lety +180

    Finally someone who talks sense about IONIZING radiation.
    I handle Cesium-137 and Strontium-90 test sources on a bi-daily basis and even Uranium ore that I have sitting in my cabinet about 1 meter away. I don't fear this test sources at all because they are nicely encased in a plastic disk. The urianium ore I am far more careful with even though the radiation is less. Because of the fact that tiny fragments can (and do) come of from time to time and those can be ingested (which is not that worrisome because normally you'd pooh them out within the day and damage is minimal to none). Inhaling is a different issue all together.
    I have people cringe (like I do when people own snakes) when they come in my place and see the uranium ore, the americium (which I make the feel even more uneasy saying that it is a decay product from plutonium) and some of my quantum random number generators that are stacked up ready to be send.
    I show them that these (made with Cesium-137 test sources) do indeed emit some gammas and they go white from fear. Then on a nice sunny day I say take the meter and let's go outside and they counts go higher than in the house with the radioactive test sources. Simply because of the solar radiation and the amounts of thorium in the sand. Beaches are a wonderful place to get some high readings.

    • @blitzandchitzgaming2584
      @blitzandchitzgaming2584 Před 6 lety +3

      I have a question for you. I heard that their were Biological molecules but I thought that molecules created RNA, then DNA and then cells but apperently that's wrong.

    • @mimikal7548
      @mimikal7548 Před 5 lety +3

      Sloan the Greater say what?

    • @blitzandchitzgaming2584
      @blitzandchitzgaming2584 Před 5 lety

      @@mimikal7548 I am saying that all biological forces should not exist within moleculer or coumpound structures only beyond them.

    • @k0nk0n
      @k0nk0n Před 5 lety +1

      @@blitzandchitzgaming2584 So your question was what again? Lol

    • @blitzandchitzgaming2584
      @blitzandchitzgaming2584 Před 5 lety

      @@k0nk0n I'm saying that life can only exist at certain size.

  • @MrEDMeaner
    @MrEDMeaner Před 9 lety +225

    Interesting and informative video, definitely helpful for someone who lacks this kind of scientific knowledge. But what strikes me most, is the development of your abilities as a presenter and also as a video editor. As someone who has been following your channel for perhaps a year it seems to me, looking back at your older videos now, that you have really honed your craft and become a presenter who is even more accessible and engaging. Well done!

    • @RobbieIsbell
      @RobbieIsbell Před 7 lety +2

      I agree with this assessment of yours!

    • @garyha2650
      @garyha2650 Před 4 lety

      Detractor comment: Not a fan of nostril cams no matter how great the individual is, all I can think of is the narcissism displayed in an Inconvenient Truth as if you really want to be that intimately close to such a monster in that case, no, I want to run for my life

    • @tink6225
      @tink6225 Před 3 lety

      @@garyha2650 ?

  • @veritasium
    @veritasium  Před 10 lety +15

    gamma radiation is an interesting case because it penetrates through a lot of matter before being absorbed but that also means it does not frequently interact with your atoms. So you would need more shielding to block it, but much of it would pass through you and do no damage. The worst case is if you eat significant amounts of radioactive atoms because that exposes you to nuclear radiation from the inside for a long period of time.

  • @abubardewa939
    @abubardewa939 Před 10 lety +50

    This is only the youtube channel that I could watch all day long... Great job sir

    • @CODE7X
      @CODE7X Před 3 lety +3

      Same but i am too late to reply haha 7 years you might not even read this

    • @abubardewa939
      @abubardewa939 Před 3 lety +2

      @@CODE7X Time flies ✈️. 7 years Damn

    • @CODE7X
      @CODE7X Před 3 lety +3

      @@abubardewa939oh you replied :)

    • @beactivebehappy9894
      @beactivebehappy9894 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CODE7X Nice little wholesome chat

  • @adamconrad8418
    @adamconrad8418 Před 2 lety +14

    I love how to see the difference of him now and a decade ago, you can really see the growth in confidence in his speech as well as how more interactive he is in his videos than before. They've only been getting better and always have been great content for science junkies like me.

  • @veritasium
    @veritasium  Před 12 lety +4

    @HayZing I think mainly because neutron radiation is not very common. Virtually all radioactive atoms decay by emitting alpha, beta, or gamma rays. The only place where one would find a significant number of neutrons is in a nuclear reactor.

    • @fieryweasel
      @fieryweasel Před 7 měsíci

      ...and the bullets flying at you would be more worrying in the short term than the neutrons

  • @PapiJack
    @PapiJack Před 7 lety +7

    It's interesting to watch your older videos and see how your style has changed. Thanks man!

    • @beactivebehappy9894
      @beactivebehappy9894 Před 2 lety

      It has even more changed now. I love his evolution from being an interviewer to a documentary presenter

  • @cptnoremac
    @cptnoremac Před 7 měsíci +2

    You shouldn't be worried, though. We use reactors with water as a moderator, the same water that's cooling the reactor. So if you lose all your water, you lose your moderator and the reaction naturally stops. There's no human element involved, so there shouldn't be an explosion. And even if the reactor does explode for some reason, there should be a containment building, so the radioactive particles don't just get dumped freely into the atmosphere.

  • @SakBatOfficial
    @SakBatOfficial Před 7 lety +41

    You all better pack up on rad away

  • @paul1964uk
    @paul1964uk Před 12 lety +4

    Thank you for clearing that up. I couldn't put up with hearing the term 'radiation' being used in the news because I always thought (from my school days) the correct term was 'radioactivity' - and that 'radiation' simply referred to everything from x-rays to radio waves (including visible light). So the media HAVE been using essentially the wrong term all along.

  • @KarbineKyle
    @KarbineKyle Před 8 lety +2

    The blonde lady with the glasses was referring to the inverse square law. Alpha particles (helium-4 nuclei) have null effect on the outside, but do a lot of damage on the inside than beta or gamma. Beta (electrons) can be absorbed by a few mm of aluminum or copper for example. Gamma loses its energy along each time it interacts with matter. It's electromagnetic radiation. About 55% of everyday radioactivity comes from Radon + decay daughters. I'm a nuclear enthusiast, so I'm familiar with handling, studying, and storing radioactive materials. Radioactivity makes many people cringe, and those people usually don't even understand the basics of radioactivity. Plutonium-239 is essentially a pure alpha emitter. Strontium-90 is essentially a pure beta emitter, and Cesium-137 is a beta emitter, but it releases gamma rays when its metastable isomer, Barium-137m decays to stable Barium-137. Each specific radionuclide emit different energies of different particles in different percentages, even if it's the same mode of decay.

  • @veritasium
    @veritasium  Před 12 lety +3

    @DaffyDaffyDaffy33322 @TiagoTiagoT Atoms that are not radioactive CAN become radioactive but only under unusual circumstances like neutron radiation. Neutrons can easily be captured by the nucleus because they are uncharged. This makes the atom into a different isotope, which may decay by emitting nuclear radiation. Also, it is not 'elements' that are radioactive, but 'isotopes'. All elements have radioactive isotopes, but some have no stable isotopes - these are noted on the Periodic Table

  • @pavelZhd
    @pavelZhd Před 10 lety +48

    1:20 - The problem is not "radiation not being able to pass through air". It's more of "Radiation not hitting the detecter" because it's going Upway, Downways or sideways of it.
    If we imagine thar radiation is spreading like a wavefront (which is usually counted as sphere) then detectable radiation is on that fitting in an area of fixed size. The amount of radiation detected is thus a ratio of this area, to total area of sphere (since total radiation in a front is constant). So as we move away from center, this ratio get less and less. Proportianally to R times -2.
    And the whole thing after this is... not totally true either.
    DNA is a rather complex molecule. Long, swilrly and all. And thus it is easy to breack if an external force applied to it. And alpha and beta radiation actually have enough penetration power to reach out DNA and hit it, potentially damaging it.
    All by itself, it's not a big deal. Our cells have a built-in mechanism to fix damage, by actually storin two copyes of each DNA, and most of time those copies are tied together, supporting each other, so if one get's damaged, it can easily repair according to it's copy.
    The problem starts when you get somwhere where a rain of radiation is that heavy, so having both copyes damaged simultaniously becomes relatively possible. And that is when you start having "radiaction sickness".
    The light version is when you have a limited amount of damaged cells. They will die off, but eventually your neiboring cells will replace them with new ones.
    In heavy version you get so many cells dead because of DNA damage, you are unable to replace them and you die.
    And Ther is also a really trycky third varian where a damaged cell is damaged in a way, so that it can live on, but will behave differently. And in that case there is a small chance that this cell will be more livable than it's neiboring cells. But not performing it's intended role. So that is stars replacing it's neiboring cells with copies of itself. That is when you get Cancer.
    Phew... that was some wall of text.

    • @pavelZhd
      @pavelZhd Před 10 lety +11

      Oh... and in defence of "Radiactive atoms are more dangerous than radioaction itself" (which is also true).
      If you only get radiation from the outside, you ca easily avoid further harm, by getting avay from the source. Easy.
      If you have radioactive atom inside you (or jut atop your skin) - it's not that easy to get away from this radiaction source. So you no longer can cut the time you are being exposed to radiation. And the longer the time, the higher the probability of radiation sickness.

    • @nextlifeonearth
      @nextlifeonearth Před 10 lety +5

      Павел Жданов what are you a russian nuclear physicist or something? hahaha..... please don't kill us.(just kidding. radioactive material also heats up inside the body when inhaled in a certain quantity making some enzymes less efficient and thus also causing harm in the body)

    • @Supergeckos1000
      @Supergeckos1000 Před 10 lety +9

      Alpha and Beta radiation really don't have a high range (the range for the Alpha particle is some centimeters, for the Beta particle less than one meter to several meters).

    • @SPLEclipse
      @SPLEclipse Před 10 lety +10

      Lizard771 It's important to point out that different tissues of the body are more of less radiosensitive than others. Because our skin contains an outer layer of completely dead (and non-reproducing) cells, any molecular damage from radiation doesn't make a difference to our health, although we can still get skin cancer, usually as a result of exposure to another form of ionizing (dangerous) radiation: that from our sun. The same thing applies to other areas of the body like the CNS and compact bone tissue that don't replicate often. Something like an ovum which could eventually go on to divide trillions of times to form a complete human is much more sensitive to damage from radiation. Fortunately, most of the really radiosensitive stuff like sex cells and our digestive tract are tucked away inside out bodies, so low-energy radiation can't tunnel deep enough to affect it.

    • @jonnywolf1234
      @jonnywolf1234 Před 10 lety

      Very well explained!

  • @urbanelemental3308
    @urbanelemental3308 Před 10 lety +6

    Thank you for doing this video. I've been trying to explain that to people. Radiation versus contamination.

  • @themantrevor
    @themantrevor Před 12 lety +1

    Dir sir, thank you so much for this video. I did a senior thesis about nuclear power. A major portion of my thesis was dedicated to this misunderstanding and what it meant to the nuclear industry. Thank you for making the world more enlightened about radiation.

  • @MM2Brown
    @MM2Brown Před 11 lety +1

    Atoms exposed to the neutron flux emitted by the reactor have their basic particles knocked around (or absorb the neutron). They loose/gain particles from this, and because they want to become stable, they start emitting their own particles trying to return to a nominal state. This is how they become "activated", and are now radioactive.

  • @codingneko
    @codingneko Před 7 lety +13

    exactly 3 minutes? HL3 confirmed

  • @charliepeterson5949
    @charliepeterson5949 Před 5 lety +3

    you sounded different man

  • @Vulcapyro
    @Vulcapyro Před 12 lety +1

    Oh my god aaaaaaaa Derek. I was extremely involved with the events of the Tohoku Earthquake, and this was a key topic that was fundamentally misunderstood by people all around the world, including the majority of the people it actually affected at the time. You would not believe how often I had to explain to people how nuclear plants work, what they do and don't do, the difference between radiation and radioactivity, etc. Even though this was a year ago, thank you so much for this video.

  • @Demonicalex117
    @Demonicalex117 Před 11 lety

    Stop disliking this guy for having his opinion. This is a very nice conversation and people will want to read it. So stop disliking because later on his comments will disappear.

  • @duragtj
    @duragtj Před 4 lety +51

    who's watching this for school because of coronavirus

    • @mimikyumasterplushshow9621
    • @vblegh1620
      @vblegh1620 Před 4 lety

      Lol

    • @acharya1574
      @acharya1574 Před 3 lety +2

      ?

    • @martinlatvian5538
      @martinlatvian5538 Před rokem

      So did You learn at school that radiation has nothing in common with viruses? Except that radiation always destroys Your DNA but a virus can improve it...

    • @yeee17
      @yeee17 Před rokem +1

      What? Radiation has nothing to do with biological viruses you clueless mf, what does the covid-19 had to do with alpha and beta radiation? 🤦‍♂️

  • @Fickfehler
    @Fickfehler Před 10 lety +3

    That machine that clicks when hit by radiation!! It's in rust :D

  • @satoau1
    @satoau1 Před 11 lety +1

    great question! there are many kinds of radiation emitted by the sun, and only some of it gets to us through the atmosphere. the particle energy (which is most damaging to biology) doesn't make it.

  • @wilsonleongyunsiong
    @wilsonleongyunsiong Před 8 lety +1

    Radiation can also could be come from our light source like sun, fluorescence light, laser beam, and so on not just the atom ray radiation. RF wave also could be the radiation. The radioactive is refer to the unstable ionized nucleus of the atom particle inside the material spontaneously emitting the ionized radiation. That's the distinction term between radiation and radioactive.

  • @brands2131
    @brands2131 Před 10 lety +3

    watch the video again, then ask your question.

  • @billybillybillybillybillybilly

    I dont care what energy I'm using. All I care about is the fact that I can charge me tablet

  • @AtomiskZabaleta
    @AtomiskZabaleta Před 11 lety +1

    I found your argument quite enjoyable to read. Also I have a question. Is it possible to run out of nuclear fuel sources? No I know uranium gets depleted. I mean ALL of the nuclear sources. Like can our nuclear energy ever be in the same trouble as our fossil fuels which are supposidly currently running out.

  • @klartskr3413
    @klartskr3413 Před 7 lety +2

    I can imagine this guy surviving nuclear blasts with a pen and a copy in his hand.

  • @MegaLietuvislt
    @MegaLietuvislt Před 8 lety +17

    but doesn't gamma radiation cause to destroy DNA and such?

    • @Meinagant
      @Meinagant Před 8 lety +4

      any ionizing radiation causes damage to dna. Such as alfa, beeta, gamma, ultraviolet and x-ray

    • @MegaLietuvislt
      @MegaLietuvislt Před 8 lety +2

      Oh okay, because I concluded out of this video that being exposed to radiation doesn't affect your body which I found weird. Thanks.

    • @mistertheguy3073
      @mistertheguy3073 Před 7 lety +1

      gamma is really weak so it's not that bad

    • @MegaLietuvislt
      @MegaLietuvislt Před 7 lety +2

      Mister Theguy I thought that it actually possesses the most energy of all the rays because gamma ray bursts from space...

    • @Meinagant
      @Meinagant Před 7 lety +4

      yeah gamma rays have high amount of energy. And they can penetrate multiple meters of lead. Correct me if Im wrong.

  • @hjembrentkent6181
    @hjembrentkent6181 Před 9 lety +14

    We iz scared cuz we iz ignorant. I thought you had figured that one out by now

    • @puncheex2
      @puncheex2 Před 8 lety

      +Hjembrent Kent Is it funner to be scared than not be ignorant?

    • @hjembrentkent6181
      @hjembrentkent6181 Před 8 lety +1

      puncheex2 I personally know a lot about physics, it's more fun to not be ignorant. Most people are scared of the unknown, and they refuse to learn. They call that a paradox

    • @annabanana8078
      @annabanana8078 Před 8 lety

      +Hjembrent Kent idk dude you could just learn about physics then be afraid of quantum physics if you really wanna be scared

    • @hjembrentkent6181
      @hjembrentkent6181 Před 8 lety

      Anna Banana I know all about quantum physics nazi girl

    • @annabanana8078
      @annabanana8078 Před 8 lety

      Hjembrent Kent i'm not talking about you specifically. and the comment wasn't against you so calm down

  • @LemonZ89
    @LemonZ89 Před 11 lety

    Some countries actually do this. Thing is, most other countries recognize that we one day might find a use for this waste material, e.g. in breeder reactors or (unfortunately) weaponry. Most of the radioactive waste produced up to now is stored in concrete bunkers dug deep into mountains, which shield the rest of the world from radiation, and the solution is pretty much perfect, given that no one actually enters (or needs the area for something else in the next 100k years).

  • @topilinkala1594
    @topilinkala1594 Před 3 lety +1

    Microwaves can also be damaging at close range. That's why most of microwave ovens have a security bolt in their chasis, so that it is not easy to remove their cover.

  • @junoguten
    @junoguten Před 10 lety +9

    Thunderf00t made a video recently wherein he stated that nuclear powerplants don't use enriched enough uranium that it explodes, or not the right isotope, or something like that. (I don't know the exact science here). Anyway, he said it'd just get a few thousand degrees hot and melt its way through some meters of concrete.
    So the only likely way for this to happen would then be a dirty bomb? Taking nuclear power plant waste and blowing it into a big area with regular explosives?

    • @antonhelsgaun
      @antonhelsgaun Před 7 lety

      it won't be a nuclear explosion but it can still explode. many reactors have a closed loop of water. this can't take infinite heat

    • @Myemnhk
      @Myemnhk Před 7 lety +1

      Anton Helsgaun infinite heat isnt a thing buddy

    • @glowingone1774
      @glowingone1774 Před 5 lety

      No its controled by control rods and reflecters to keep the atoms from going nuclear

    • @mimikal7548
      @mimikal7548 Před 5 lety +1

      There are other things in power plants that could potentially explode - most significantly the cooling system.

  • @517nickyj
    @517nickyj Před 10 lety +5

    going from people that don't know what water is to people that talk about alpha and beta particles.. alrighty then

    • @iwantitpaintedblack
      @iwantitpaintedblack Před 10 lety

      probably because he was interviewing at a university of science?

    • @517nickyj
      @517nickyj Před 10 lety +1

      I hate when people put statements into questions, it shows weakness.

    • @517nickyj
      @517nickyj Před 10 lety +1

      i understand why, I just had a bit of a shock is all.

    • @iwantitpaintedblack
      @iwantitpaintedblack Před 10 lety

      because my statement is uncertain. hence the word "probably" because i am not sure.
      and i agree, it does sound kinda negative :P

    • @517nickyj
      @517nickyj Před 10 lety +1

      Oh, I thought you were being condescending my bad

  • @zendoc49
    @zendoc49 Před rokem +1

    hands down you are the best teacher!. Keep it up

  • @puddingpimp
    @puddingpimp Před 11 lety

    Cooking food in the microwave tends to make it go soggy and ruin the flavor, so from that perspective it can be bad to cook food in the microwave, but it won't make your food radioactive or create radicals. The energy of a photon in a microwave oven is only 9.93 micro electron volts (based on a 2.4GHz magnetron) which is far too low to cause nuclear spallation or ionisation in any chemical which is not already explosive.

  • @Rainpub
    @Rainpub Před 8 lety +4

    thy, take my subscription :)

  • @mistertheguy3073
    @mistertheguy3073 Před 7 lety +15

    he loosk like he didnt sleep forever

  • @RC_Engineering
    @RC_Engineering Před 11 lety

    You are right, nuclear power is one of the best sources of energy, not to mention probably safer than petroleum all-in-all.

  • @childrenofbodomfan74
    @childrenofbodomfan74 Před 10 lety +2

    He was right in a way. Allthough emission of alpha particles from the powerplant is not a concern, if they were to penetrate your organism (by ingestion mostly since even air is a sufficient barrier), then they would be the most damaging to you because of their ionising potential (causing heterolitc ruptures etc)

    • @666Tomato666
      @666Tomato666 Před 10 lety

      that's what he's talking about since the 2:30 mark

    • @Markus9705
      @Markus9705 Před 9 lety

      Mostly because they are so heavy (4.002 units vs 0.000548 units for an electron).

  • @lodziklocPL
    @lodziklocPL Před 10 lety

    It's not really about gravity/attracting, but about absorbtion, I think. Earth's atmosphere absorbs much of radiation, leaving very little to reach humans, while in space there's much less matter which shields humans from radiation.
    Also, black holes actually do attract photons, although it is totally unrelated to our topic - consider this as a curiosity.

  • @MM2Brown
    @MM2Brown Před 11 lety

    When scientists invent a method to give average people spider powers. The closest thing to spider powers you'll get from radiation is either sterility or cancer.

  • @K1DBeast
    @K1DBeast Před 11 lety

    Cobalt 60 is really the biggest nuclide of concern. The issue is that it has such an incredibly long half life of about 5.3 years. If it is ingested some is excreted, but some will be absorbed by tissue. The gamma radiation emitted can cause cancer. Never fear though. Nuclear power plants are held to an incredibly high standard. The likelihood of there being an accident catastrophic enough to release fission products and the like into the atmosphere is EXTREMELY slim.

  • @khajiit92
    @khajiit92 Před 12 lety +1

    it's very nice to have a civil debate on the internet for once though :)

  • @AtomiskZabaleta
    @AtomiskZabaleta Před 11 lety

    Radiation is everywhere actually! It's just that the normal level that we experience in our every day lives isn't so dangerous. There's a minimum level of radiation you can experience in about a year before you start to see effects, and the normal amount of radiation that's, pretty much everywhere is nowhere near enough to really effect us.

  • @franklouuu
    @franklouuu Před 11 lety

    Yes. No radioactive waste is one of the most appealing features of fusion. About the dense plasma focus fusion, this is definately not my area of expertise, but I've heard that there are still several problems in fusion that remain to be solved related with the life expectancy of the equipment.

  • @elenna_alexia
    @elenna_alexia Před 11 lety

    There are actually studies that found hightened rates of cancer and leukemia around German nuclear power plants, which have a fairly high standart of safety compared to ones in many other countries, even though it is still far from perfect.

  • @danieldong5400
    @danieldong5400 Před 11 lety

    Your argument is correct, in that the statistics presented have no reflection on danger in any way. However there are plenty of statistics which do provide evidence that nuclear power is in fact safer than the most other forms. In terms of deaths per watt hour produced, nuclear power causes the least deaths. On the other hand, coal, the most common form, causes the most. These stats include nuclear disasters like Chernobyl and Fukushima.

  • @sebastianespinoza9781
    @sebastianespinoza9781 Před 10 lety +2

    Todos los videos son de verdad excelentes, increibles. Por favor algún dia les agreguen subtitulos en español para quienes no dominamos tanto el ingles y para que millones de personas de habla hispana puedan disfrutar de la ciencia. Subtitulos por favor!!!!

  • @simonnance
    @simonnance Před 11 lety

    A radioactive isotope of an atom is one which has the potential to decay and give out radiation (alpha/beta particles and gamma rays). Radioactivity doesn't "occur" it is an inherent property of an isotope that gives it a likelihood to decay. The initial radioactive material in a reactor is (usually) Uranium-238, after a period of time the reactor also ends up containing a range of decay products from the Uranium as well which are considerably more dangerous as they decay quicker.

  • @lodziklocPL
    @lodziklocPL Před 10 lety

    Photons have no mass, but they still have energy, and that's the reason why they're affected by gravity, although in a very minor way. If you don't believe me, just look at a black hole and you'll see that light behaves weirdly when around one.
    Also, we cannot perceive curvature of OUR OWN spacetime in ANY WAY, unless we are able to be absolutely independent of it, which would require you to be above our spacetime.

  • @kennethflorek8532
    @kennethflorek8532 Před 11 lety

    The radiation from radioactive decay has the misfortune of being very identifiable and readily detected. This leaves people with the impression that it must be very intense and dangerous whenever it is detected, even though the amount is so tiny and its effects just about impossible to find in statistics.

  • @Fun4GA
    @Fun4GA Před 3 lety +1

    The term your describing is Contamination. Radioactive particles in an unwanted place.

  • @Miscmanismiscing
    @Miscmanismiscing Před 12 lety +2

    I would recognise that background room anywhere! Flashbacks to intermediate/senior physics lab

  • @Anti-proton
    @Anti-proton Před 12 lety

    You must have been asking people at a university of college. On the streets, I would doubt most people would know much about the subject at all. The woman explaining negative exponential relationship was also amusing. She is correct.
    Good video!
    There isn't much quality science or truth in what is posted on CZcams with respect to nuclear affairs. Please post more.

  • @VallornDeathblade
    @VallornDeathblade Před 11 lety

    Most of it is pretty safely contained. They mix it into chemically stable blocks of glass (so it cant dissolve or react to contaminate things) which can then be stored with relative ease. The pollution from petroleum is mostly gaseous in nature so is nowhere as easy to contain by comparison.

  • @kennethflorek8532
    @kennethflorek8532 Před 11 lety

    It would not do anything in normal operation. Radiation sometimes goes down a little. There is naturally occuring radiation, which varies, and the massive amount of absorbing material in a nuclear plant sometimes soaks up enough to drop it near the plant.

  • @veritasium
    @veritasium  Před 12 lety

    coal power plants account for a percent of radiation because they burn coal which contains radioactive atoms, which then travel through the atmosphere to you and decay. You'd receive much less near a nuclear power station.

  • @Anti-proton
    @Anti-proton Před 12 lety

    Note that x^2 is raised to a power, an exponent, ergo exponential.
    If form a^x is not, but 1/a^x is, than I would be able to turn anything exponential into non-exponential by merely changing the sign of the exponent...
    You can rewrite 1/x^2 as 1 * x^-2 (since 1*a is it's multiplicative identity, 1/x^2 is the same as 1*x^-2 or merely x^-2).

  • @JDMusicTuition
    @JDMusicTuition Před 11 lety

    To top that, few of the deaths at Chernobyl (~10) can be directly linked to radiation. Most were from the shock of disruption of peoples lives.
    The incidence of cancers and such were in the end "not distinguishable from the background", according to the WHO if I'm not mistaken.

  • @endimion17
    @endimion17 Před 11 lety

    Just because it passes through doesn't mean it's harmless. It ionizes water molecules on its path and creates radicals that chop up whatever they find, and sometimes it's the genome.
    Water is abundant in our tissue, so the chance of a gamma ray impacting it is much greater than it impacting DNA molecule.
    Most of the damage in radioactive contamination of the body is done via the radicals, and not directly.

  • @lordmetroid
    @lordmetroid Před 10 lety

    Biggest concern is to ingest by food or air radioactive particles that will be incorporated in the tissue and radiate one spot continously.

  • @complexham
    @complexham Před 11 lety

    The radiation is when energetic particles or energetic waves travel through space, and DNA is made of tiny atoms, so if one of these energetic particles or energetic waves hits one of these atoms can change the information in the DNA and therefore make alterations in the organism or mutations. Sorry for my english.

  • @45nickname
    @45nickname Před 11 lety

    The problem comparing Them in any ways is radioactive affects are hard to quantify, so, true, but we could eventually find that , even with the higher rate of cancer, and any other unknown affects, that it is still fraction to that of car accidents.
    we simply can't quantify it one way or the other.

  • @saizai
    @saizai Před 12 lety

    @ 1:15 'can't really pass through air' isn't clear; being farther away also means simply that you're detecting a smaller and smaller portion of the sphere; you'd have to maintain constant relative size being detected to really demonstrate that the air is stopping it

  • @veritasium
    @veritasium  Před 12 lety

    @Chuukun1 You can have radioactive atoms! In fact I have many radioactive atoms inside me right now. There is no contradiction with the terminology. To wit: you can have an atom of carbon. There are isotopes of carbon. Some of them are radioactive. If you have an atom of that isotope then you have a radioactive atom of carbon.

  • @rich1051414
    @rich1051414 Před 12 lety

    Radiation is just short for electromagnetic radiation, which is simply charged particles moving through space. Light, heat, radio, microwaves, x-rays, gamma waves, these are all the same, but with the bad ones having more energy and a higher frequency(steeper wave slopes). The higher the energy, the more easily the wave can pass through a dense medium, although they also have more energy to transfer when they do collide. The high end frequency can collide with DNA, causing heavy damage.

  • @ethalum
    @ethalum Před 11 lety

    The video actually explains that it isn't the radiation that is the problem. It's the radioactive materials that cause problems. He was saying that even if the radiation could escape, it wouldn't be able to harm anyone because it has such a short range. But radioactive materials can travel long distances. Plus burning coal produces infrared radioation, which isn't ionising so there is no need to worry about that. My point is that "EDCAPED" radiation doesn't get far.

  • @jesuisalexmiranda
    @jesuisalexmiranda Před 12 lety

    What is your career? I'm from Mexico City and I just began to watch your videos, I think, a week ago. And I like them so much! But I've been wondering that. Thanks and congrats for the channel! Is awesome!

  • @Fredigorbe
    @Fredigorbe Před 11 lety

    I think the decay of a uranium atom creates one daughter nucleus (not multiple ones and thus not daughter nuclei).
    The radioactivity is caused by the alpha particle emitted by the uranium nucleus. An alpha particle consists of two protons and two neutrons, so the nucleus has thrown away two of it's protons and two of it's neutrons, therefore it has decayed into a lighter element.
    Radioactivity occurs when an atom emits alpha, beta or gamma radiation.

  • @7cle
    @7cle Před 11 lety

    "When it darn well pleases to" is the anwser, but what you measure is that half of them have decayed after that time or the counter measures half the initial rate, in other ways.

  • @48Dacman
    @48Dacman Před 11 lety

    I can never tell if these videos are fun and educational or a scathing indictment against public education systems

  • @satoau1
    @satoau1 Před 11 lety

    almost my point. another user was using automobile deaths as an example to say that they're more dangerous than nuclear power plants, which they're not. similarly, although cows kill more people every year than sharks do, that doesn't mean we should be less afraid of a shark than we should of a shark. cars kill more people because there are more of them, not because they are more dangerous, which was my point.

  • @MM2Brown
    @MM2Brown Před 11 lety

    All accidents that occured with nuclear reactors (chernobyl, three-mile island, the japanese reactors) were due to humans either ignoring warning signs and ignoring indications, disregarding safety restrictions imposed by Nuclear Regulatory Comission, or simple apathy towards design considerations. The stigma around nuclear power has actually been detrimental because it prevents newer safety methods from being developed and implemented. Nuclear power could easily solve any energy crisis.

  • @khajiit92
    @khajiit92 Před 12 lety

    the thing is, a lump of radioactive material has a LOT of atoms in it, so it'll be radioactive for a long time, when an individual atom will decay is random, but on average its fairly regular. how long something is radioactive is measured by it's 'half-life', in other words how long before half of its atoms have decayed and turned into something else.

  • @aviationgeek604
    @aviationgeek604 Před 3 lety

    This guy made a documentary about Radiation and Uranium and it’s pretty good!

  • @VallornDeathblade
    @VallornDeathblade Před 11 lety

    Not especially. It's actually pretty easy to store but the scare stories about it mean that noone wants it stored near them so you can't put it anywhere.

  • @alexmueller4047
    @alexmueller4047 Před 10 lety

    Radiation: particles of matter that are shot out by radioactive atoms eg alpha (helium sized particles) beta (electron sized particles) gamma (electromagnetic waves)
    Radioactive: a song by imagine dragons
    Radioactive: an atom that strong force can no longer hold together and thus the atom releases particles.

  • @larrytaco
    @larrytaco Před 13 lety

    i really like this you interview really intelligent people unlike most other shows of this sort

  • @teletesselator
    @teletesselator Před 11 lety

    Very good. AND, you should have also explained how radioactive particulates can propagate and multiply.
    Maybe the room full of set mouse-traps with a golf-ball thrown experiment in to demonstrate?!? ;)

  • @andrewandrew599
    @andrewandrew599 Před 10 lety +1

    Technically, bananas are radioactive.

  • @Bnelen
    @Bnelen Před 11 lety

    Congratulations if somebody seriously had a huge problem getting confused with this terminology xD concept of radiation seems easy enough to understand for me.

  • @max.well.c
    @max.well.c Před 2 lety

    For a video made 10 years ago it’s really well done

  • @TheNinjinx
    @TheNinjinx Před 11 lety

    Even flight attendants receive more radiation than people who work at nuclear power plants every day. Coal power plants emit more radiation than nuclear power plants too. The amount of radiation that escapes a nuclear power plant is really quite small.

  • @SSGranor
    @SSGranor Před 11 lety

    Iodine 125 (half life of about 2 months) is also a problem, since ingested iodine ends up in the thyroid gland. And cesium 137 has a half life of over 30 years, meaning that a about quarter of the Cs 137 released during the era of nuclear weapons testing is still in the environment today.

  • @sgsawant
    @sgsawant Před 11 lety

    Great video! Just a minor point: gamma radiation was left out altogether.

  • @PixelCortex
    @PixelCortex Před 11 lety

    Most of the gamma radiation comes from outer space (unless you're a rare isotope of potassium sitting on earth). You need immense energy to generate gamma radiation, like lightning strikes, atomic bombs or the fusion reactions in the core of The Sun.
    So I don't think you have much to worry about.

  • @PBrown471
    @PBrown471 Před 11 lety

    Alpha radiation is a charged Helium Nucleus (2 protons, 2 neutrons, no electrons), Beta radiation is a high speed electron (electrons exhibit wave particle duality and hence can be thought of as a wave much the same as light), Gamma radiation is a wave exactly like light, but with much more energy.
    Different radioactive nuclei will have different decay mechanisms and will emit different types of radiation.

  • @Lashb1ade
    @Lashb1ade Před 11 lety

    Perhaps I misunderstood, but Fusion and Hydrogen Power are very different things. Fusion is where hydrogen nuclei are joined together to make Helium.
    Hydrogen Power is where Hydrogen and Oxygen are joined together to make water.

  • @MrChrisRab
    @MrChrisRab Před 10 lety

    That's my whole point: it's said in the video that gamma rays don't interact with much. Therefore, absorption by Earth's atmosphere is very limited. So my initial guess is that the probability of interaction with a gamma ray is similar whether you're in a spacecraft or on Earth. If the issue is similar to that of CMEs, then the problem is the result of a possible interaction between the ray and materials which make up the spacecraft. That result is more harmful to humans than a gamma ray itself.

  • @ClAcKeRzW
    @ClAcKeRzW Před 11 lety +1

    You seem like you're a well informed person :) Would a nuclear power station when built in quite a bio-diverse area, kill off or cause abnormalities/lack of germination in plants and seeds? Would the Gamma be able to affect them within a 1km radius for example? Just thinking of the potential area of affect of a fully operational plant. Cheers.

  • @khajiit92
    @khajiit92 Před 12 lety

    alpha is 2 protons and 2 neutrons, beta is electrons (or positrons for beta+), gamma is just photons of energy. i'm not sure what just neutrons are called and whether they are naturally released (apart from when we make them)

  • @ThatsWhenItkickedin
    @ThatsWhenItkickedin Před 7 lety

    Protection: Distance, time, shielding. No big deal

  • @HalfgildWynac
    @HalfgildWynac Před 11 lety

    We should, definitely! However, a nuclear POWER PLANT doesn't generate any radiation a person should be aware of. It even cannot make a nuclear explosion. What we fear is a possible accident. For example, a usual heat explosion (i.e. too much steam pressure, and things blow up) will launch the station's fuel up in the air, and spread lots of radioactive stuff miles and tens of miles around (the weather can make it worse).

  • @baussier134
    @baussier134 Před 7 lety +1

    Derek videos improved a lot since 2011, wow!

  • @veritasium
    @veritasium  Před 12 lety

    @toolache you're right in that over time radiation shielding at say a nuclear reactor becomes radioactive and so it must be disposed of appropriately when the plant is decommissioned. This is normally due to neutron radiation more than alpha or beta.

  • @politicomdk
    @politicomdk Před 12 lety

    More videos - make more videos!!!!
    They're always nice to watch during the breaks ! :)

  • @Anti-proton
    @Anti-proton Před 12 lety

    Inverse square is exponential. The square part is a give away for most exponential equations (a squared number is made so by it's exponent, thus an exponent-tial equation).
    On the flip side I read my post and my stupid iPad changed lots of my words. I wrote, "university or college", and the iPad made it, "university of college". Thanks Apple.

  • @RokkerBoyy
    @RokkerBoyy Před 11 lety

    not to mention its hard to live too close to one since they tend to be fenced off and a good distance from said fence

  • @TheBananular
    @TheBananular Před 11 lety

    Gamma radiation mostly just passes through a human body and is in most cases safe unless it is of high enough intensity. Not to mention the rays from most gamma emitting radioisotopes, although having greater range than alpha and beta radiation, causes far less ionisation to body tissue.