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#radiationprotection

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🎥 EURADOS 2025: Radon Insights & Key Takeaways

I've put together a quick summary of EURADOS 2025! It covers the most important talks and updates from the working group on radon measurements.

🔬 Latest on radon dosimetry
📊 New ways to improve measurement techniques
🌍 Why these updates matter for radiation protection

Check it out! youtu.be/O51RLpklD-w

EURADOS2025 #RadonScience #ResearchInnovation #RadiationProtection

Replied to Spaceflight 🚀

Earth remains under the influence of a waning high-speed #SolarWind ☀️ stream. No Earth-directed coronal mass ejections (#CMEs) were observed over the past 24 hours. Earth’s #geomagnetic field 🌐 was unsettled to active over the past day. earthsky.org/sun/sun-news-acti

EarthSky | Updates on your cosmos and world · Sun news: Sun flaring low. Auroras’ last gasp?
Replied to Spaceflight 🚀

#Astronauts 👨‍🚀 travelling to #Mars would encounter #radiation ☢️ levels higher than humans have ever experienced, and be exposed to them for much longer.

To protect them, the #spacecraft would either have to be much bulkier, making launches expensive and difficult, or be made of more efficient #shielding 🛡️ materials. skyatnightmagazine.com/space-m

BBC Sky at Night Magazine · Elon Musk plans to put humans on Mars But could humans really survive the journey?
Replied to Spaceflight 🚀

📆 1989 Had you been flying around the #Moon 🌙 at that time, you would have absorbed well over 6 Sieverts of radiation ☢️ - a dose that would most likely kill 💀 you within a month or so.

📆 2024 “It wasn’t possible 10 years ago. Using grid-like, porous structures we not only brought the weight down, but we also brought the needed power down from megawatts to 100 watts. Such shields 🛡️ are not #ScienceFiction anymore” arstechnica.com/science/2024/0

Ars Technica · Shields up: New ideas might make active shielding viableActive shielding was first proposed in the '60s. We’re finally close to making it work.
Replied to Spaceflight 🚀

Traditional shielding strategies aim to reduce #astronaut radiation ☢️ exposure by increasing vehicle mass, but this is ineffective for the extremely penetrating #galactic cosmic rays. #Astronauts will face radiation hazards resulting from solar ☀️ activity that can create solar energetic particles. Active shielding 🛡️ approaches are likely a required component of any realistic solution (#electrostatic shielding) sciencedirect.com/science/arti

Replied to Spaceflight 🚀

#Radiation ☢️ shielding is a mandatory element in the design of an integrated solution to mitigate the effects of radiation during long #DeepSpace voyages for human exploration. #Kevlar has radiation shielding 🛡️ performances comparable to Polyethylene, reaching a dose rate reduction of 32 ± 2% and a dose equivalent rate reduction of 55 ± 4% (for a shield of 10 g/cm2). nature.com/articles/s41598-017

NaturePerformances of Kevlar and Polyethylene as radiation shielding on-board the International Space Station in high latitude radiation environment - Scientific ReportsPassive radiation shielding is a mandatory element in the design of an integrated solution to mitigate the effects of radiation during long deep space voyages for human exploration. Understanding and exploiting the characteristics of materials suitable for radiation shielding in space flights is, therefore, of primary importance. We present here the results of the first space-test on Kevlar and Polyethylene radiation shielding capabilities including direct measurements of the background baseline (no shield). Measurements are performed on-board of the International Space Station (Columbus modulus) during the ALTEA-shield ESA sponsored program. For the first time the shielding capability of such materials has been tested in a radiation environment similar to the deep-space one, thanks to the feature of the ALTEA system, which allows to select only high latitude orbital tracts of the International Space Station. Polyethylene is widely used for radiation shielding in space and therefore it is an excellent benchmark material to be used in comparative investigations. In this work we show that Kevlar has radiation shielding performances comparable to the Polyethylene ones, reaching a dose rate reduction of 32 ± 2% and a dose equivalent rate reduction of 55 ± 4% (for a shield of 10 g/cm2).
Replied to Spaceflight 🚀

Despite guidelines and the past 30 years of research, there has been little progress on fully defining or mitigating the space radiation ☢️ risk to human crew. Schwadron et al. project that Galactic Cosmic Ray fluences will be substantially higher 📈 during the next solar cycles leading to increased background #radiation exposure and, subsequently, as much as a 20% decrease in the allowable safe days in space (outside of #LEO) nature.com/articles/s41526-018

NatureLimitations in predicting the space radiation health risk for exploration astronauts - npj MicrogravityDespite years of research, understanding of the space radiation environment and the risk it poses to long-duration astronauts remains limited. There is a disparity between research results and observed empirical effects seen in human astronaut crews, likely due to the numerous factors that limit terrestrial simulation of the complex space environment and extrapolation of human clinical consequences from varied animal models. Given the intended future of human spaceflight, with efforts now to rapidly expand capabilities for human missions to the moon and Mars, there is a pressing need to improve upon the understanding of the space radiation risk, predict likely clinical outcomes of interplanetary radiation exposure, and develop appropriate and effective mitigation strategies for future missions. To achieve this goal, the space radiation and aerospace community must recognize the historical limitations of radiation research and how such limitations could be addressed in future research endeavors. We have sought to highlight the numerous factors that limit understanding of the risk of space radiation for human crews and to identify ways in which these limitations could be addressed for improved understanding and appropriate risk posture regarding future human spaceflight.
Replied to Spaceflight 🚀

A surprising 😲 #geomagnetic storm hit and disturbed Earth’s geomagnetic field early today. A G2 (moderate) geomagnetic storm level was observed and a G1 (minor) storming was ongoing at the time of this writing. It seems the expected glancing blow from a #CME that left the sun ☀️ on August 23 was a stronger hit. earthsky.org/sun/sun-news-acti

EarthSky | Updates on your cosmos and world · Sun news: Sun flaring low. Auroras’ last gasp?

#Computer errors 🐞 from #OuterSpace from a vote-counting machine that added thousands of non-existent votes to a candidate's tally, to a commercial #airliner ✈️ that suddenly dropped hundreds of feet mid-flight ⤵️, injuring dozens of passengers. A pacemaker's ❤️ built-in computer data got corrupted mid-flight. A group of researchers investigated more than 2,000 bit errors logged by a #satellite 🛰️ over roughly two years in #orbit. A huge number of the errors were clustered in an area called the South Atlantic Anomaly. According to #Nasa, #astronauts 👨‍🚀 on the #SpaceShuttle used to notice that their #laptops 💻 sometimes crashed when the space shuttle passed through the #SAA bbc.com/future/article/2022101

BBC · The computer errors from outer spaceBy Chris Baraniuk

📆 Oct 4, 2019 “We don’t have a clue 🙈🙉🙊 about #radiation ☢️. The way #NASA handles a lot of the radiation work has been a lot of predictions 🔮. I think that we’re grossly underestimating the effects.”

In reality, some kind of radiation shielding 🛡️ will be needed theverge.com/2019/10/4/2089505

The Verge · Elon Musk’s future Starship updates could use more details on human health and survivalBy Loren Grush