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What are the dangers of radiation exposure?

Radiation can be very useful in medicine, industry, and research, but too much exposure is harmful because ionizing radiation can damage living cells and DNA.


Dangers of radiation exposure

Short-term (acute) effects

  • Radiation sickness (after a large dose in a short time)
    • Nausea, vomiting, fatigue
    • Skin burns and hair loss
    • Organ damage at high doses
  • High, sudden doses (like from accidents or explosions) can be fatal.

Long-term effects

  • Cancer: Damaged DNA may lead to leukemia, thyroid cancer, lung cancer, etc.
  • Genetic mutations: Radiation can cause heritable changes if reproductive cells are affected.
  • Cataracts: Clouding of the eye lens.
  • Reduced fertility after significant exposure.

Environmental and situational risks

  • Radon gas (a natural radioactive gas seeping from rocks) is a major source of background radiation and a lung cancer risk.
  • Nuclear accidents (like Chernobyl, Fukushima) caused widespread contamination.
  • Improper handling of medical/industrial isotopes can lead to accidental exposure.

Protection (Radiation Safety Principles)

  • Time: Limit exposure time.
  • Distance: Stay as far as possible from the source.
  • Shielding: Use barriers (lead, concrete, or even thick water) to block radiation.
  • Monitoring: Geiger counters, dosimeters, and safety protocols keep doses within safe limits.

Summary: Small, controlled doses of radiation (like in X-rays or cancer treatment) are safe and useful. But large or prolonged exposure can cause sickness, cancer, or genetic damage, which is why strict safety measures are always used.

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