Various

units

have

been

used

to

express

exposure

to

radiation such as the roentgen, rep, rem, and rad. All are intended to express some relationship between the radiation

‘energy absorbed and biological effects. Since it is not critical
for the following discussions to understand the technical differences among the units, only the “roentgen” will be used. To

provide some perspective as to the magnitude of the “roent-

gen” table I is included.

2. Sources and Nature of Fallout
The major source of radioactive materials in fallout is the

fissioning or splitting of atoms of uranium and plutonium that
gives rise to a large numberof unstable radioisotopes. Inthe ©
fusion process hydrogen nuclei are joined together. Induced
radioactive products result when inert materials capture
neutrons that are released during either the fission or fusion

process.

Generally, these induced radioactive materials are

relatively short-lived and contribute only in a minor way to

radiation exposures to man. Theprincipal exception is carbon
14 described in section I F (page 16).
Some of these radioactive materials escape as gases and are
dispersed and diluted in the atmosphere. Most of the fission

products, however, become incorporated into or attached onto

minute inert particles of dust and debris from the immediate
environment of the bomb. The dust particles, together with
the associated radioactive nuclides, are swept high into the air
by the heat and force of the nuclear explosion. The larger
particles and those in the lowerlevels of the cloud fall nearby.
Smaller particles in the upper levels are carried away to be
spread worldwide. The worldwide distribution of these radioactive particles follows the same pattern as would occur with
any other small particles injected into the same regions of the

atmosphere —radioactivity has essentially no effect on the

pattern of distribution.
Roughly, a nuclear detonation of one-half million tons or
less, fired at a low altitude—but high enough so the fireball
does not intersect the ground—results in most of the fission

products remaining in the lower atmosphere, the troposphere.
They are deposited on the earth’s surface at a rate such that
one-half of the amount remaining in the atmosphereat any one
time falls in 2-4 weeks (called tropospheric residence halftime). As the energy yields of the nuclear detonations increase, more and moreof the fission products are swept higher
and higher into the stratosphere—the layer above the tropo-

sphere(fig. 2).
The residence half-time here is more like onehalf a year for injection into the lower stratosphere in the polar

2

U.S. WEATHER BUREAU PHOTO.

FIGURE 2.—Generalized drawing of the earth’s atmosphere.

regions and one year or somewhatless at the equator.

Radio-

active debris from nuclear detonations occurring at very high

altitudes (about 30 miles and higher) may have a residence
half-time of five years or more.

Roughly two-thirds of the radioactive particulate debris

injected into the lower stratosphere at the north polar regions
has been observed to fall in the 30°-60° North latitude zone,

where about 80 percent of the world’s population live. Injection at the equatorial regions has been observed to result in
a more even distribution between the two hemispheres.
For surface bursts of high (million ton range) yield about
50-80 percent of the radioactive debris is deposited as “early
fallout,” i.e., within 24 hours.

Air bursts—wherethe fireball

does not approach the surface — result in little, if any, local fallout.
Table 2 tabulates some of the key data on estimated nuclear

energyyields from all past nuclear weaponstests. Of the total

energy released of 511 million tons equivalent of TNT about 70
TABLE 2.— Estimates of Yields from All Nuclear Weapons Tests
USSR
US and UK
161
Total million tons*.........0.....2. cece cece cece eee ec eee nee een eene 350
82
Fission million tons............00...:ccccccceceeeeeeeeeeeeeneeanees 111
51
Fission million tons scattered globally.................... 110

Totalt
611
193
161

*TNT equivalent.
tThe French tests have contributed only smal! amounts.

145-413 O-64—2

.

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