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By far the best shielding against radioactivity
is GAUSS' LAW: the intensity of a point source
falls off as the square of its distance from
the observer. All localized sources are labelled with their
activity at a given distance, for instance
"10 mr/h at 1 m."
If one keeps at least 10 m
away from such a source, one will receive less than
0.1 mR per hour, which is not worrisome.17
Other safety measures
include lead aprons, which are effective only
for X-rays and -rays, and thick concrete
shielding for neutrons and high-energy charged particles
(these are much in evidence at TRIUMF).
Jess H. Brewer -
Last modified: Mon Nov 23 13:48:01 PST 2015