Units
There are many different units used to measure radiation.
However, the international units preferred are the International
System (SI) units.
- The Gray (Gy) is used as a measurement of how
much radiation is absorbed by a body.
- 1 Gray = 1 Joule per kg of material
- The Sievert (Sv) is used as a measurement of
not only the amount of radiation that is absorbed by a given body
but it also takes into account quality (Q) of the radiation that
is absorbed. For example, exposure to 1 Sievert of alpha radiation
is more damaging than exposure to 1 Sievert of beta radiation
in any given amount of time. Highly damaging radiation has a high
value for Q.
- The Becquerel (Bq) is used to measure radioactivity
or the decaying of radioactive material.
- 1 Becquerel = 1 disintegration per second.
A disintegration is the transformation an
element undergoes. For example, Uranium-238 decays to Thorium-234
through alpha emission.
SI unit prefixes

Source: newnet.lanl.gov
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