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Types of radiation – WJECBackground radiation

Three subatomic particles have different charges and masses. Radioactive particles decay and release alpha, beta and gamma radiation - natural and artificial sources of background radiation.

Part of Physics (Single Science)Forces, space and radioactivity

Background radiation

Background is all around us. Some of it comes from natural sources and some comes from artificial sources.

Natural sources

Natural sources of background radiation include:

  • cosmic rays - radiation that reaches the Earth from space
  • rocks and soil - some rocks are radioactive and give off radioactive radon gas
  • living things - plants absorb radioactive materials from the soil and these pass up the food chain

For most people, natural sources contribute the most to their background radiation dose.

50% radon gas from ground, 50% split between buildings, ground, food and drink, cosmic rays, artificial sources. Artificial sources: majority medical, then nuclear power, weapons test and other.
Figure caption,
Average contribution of different sources to natural background radiation

Artificial sources

There is little we can do about natural background radiation. After all, we cannot stop eating, drinking or breathing to avoid it.

However, human activity has added to background radiation by creating and using artificial sources of radiation. These include medical X-rays, radioactive fallout from nuclear weapons testing and radioactive waste from nuclear power stations.

Artificial sources account for about 15 per cent of the average background radiation dose. Nearly all artificial background radiation comes from medical procedures, such as receiving X-rays for X-ray photographs.

X-rays: airport security, chest x-ray in hospital. Nuclear missiles: bombs exploded by man releasing radiation into environment. Nuclear power: stations release radiation into the atmosphere.
Figure caption,
Three sources of artificial radiation