Low dose radiation

the history of the US Department of Energy research program

Low dose radiation

the history of the US Department of Energy research program
Antone L Brooks
Book - 2018

Antone Brooks grew up close enough to Nevada Test Site nuclear detonations to see the sky light up, feel the shockwaves, and be exposed to radioactive fallout. His long scientific career--from early days trekking into the Uinta Mountains to hunt contaminated deer for tissue samples, to thousands of hours devoted to careful microscope work on chromosomal aberrations in animal studies--has been an increasingly sophisticated search for answers to questions these fallout exposures raised. How dangerous were they? Could they produce cancer? How afraid of low dose radiation should people be? Dr. Brooks served as Chief Scientist for the U.S. Department of Energy new Low Dose Radiation Research Program from 1999 to 2008. During that decade, the group redefined the field. Researchers applied advances in instrumentation and molecular biology from the Human Genome Project and developed new technologies, like the microbeam, to examine cellular response to low dose radiation. The findings were startling. At low doses, biological reactions are unique and often unrelated to those that occur at high doses. The hugely influential linear-no-threshold model--which predicted that damage from acute exposures can be extrapolated linearly to low dose exposures--was flawed. In fact, small doses of radiation can have an adaptive protective effect. Hit theory, the idea that radiation only affected cells it directly traversed, yielded to a new bystander theory,which hypothesizes that cells communicate with each other and a dose to one cell affects others surrounding it. Low Dose Radiation tells the story of the DOE program's development, the scientists who made it viable, and the fundamental results, highlighting lessons learned--including how that knowledge might be useful in a nuclear event. It describes the impact on current thinking, summarizing the data and providing a scientific basis for setting radiation standards. Although primarily a scientific text, the author believes that communicating with non-scientist decision makers about conclusions is extremely important. He hopes this history will illuminate crucial work that remains and stimulate new research.

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Barcode Status Material Type CallNumber
37413317840413 متاح Non-fiction 612.0144 BROOKS
التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
المؤلف الرئيسي: Brooks, Antone L., 1938- (مؤلف)
التنسيق: كتاب
اللغة:English
منشور في: Pullman, Washington : Washington State University Press, [2018]
الموضوعات:

MARC

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245 1 0 |a Low dose radiation :  |b the history of the U.S. Department of Energy research program /  |c Antone L. Brooks. 
264 1 |a Pullman, Washington :  |b Washington State University Press,  |c [2018] 
300 |a 316 pages :  |b illustrations (some color) ;  |c 23 cm 
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504 |a Includes bibliographical references and index. 
520 |a Antone Brooks grew up close enough to Nevada Test Site nuclear detonations to see the sky light up, feel the shockwaves, and be exposed to radioactive fallout. His long scientific career--from early days trekking into the Uinta Mountains to hunt contaminated deer for tissue samples, to thousands of hours devoted to careful microscope work on chromosomal aberrations in animal studies--has been an increasingly sophisticated search for answers to questions these fallout exposures raised. How dangerous were they? Could they produce cancer? How afraid of low dose radiation should people be? Dr. Brooks served as Chief Scientist for the U.S. Department of Energy new Low Dose Radiation Research Program from 1999 to 2008. During that decade, the group redefined the field. Researchers applied advances in instrumentation and molecular biology from the Human Genome Project and developed new technologies, like the microbeam, to examine cellular response to low dose radiation. The findings were startling. At low doses, biological reactions are unique and often unrelated to those that occur at high doses. The hugely influential linear-no-threshold model--which predicted that damage from acute exposures can be extrapolated linearly to low dose exposures--was flawed. In fact, small doses of radiation can have an adaptive protective effect. Hit theory, the idea that radiation only affected cells it directly traversed, yielded to a new bystander theory,which hypothesizes that cells communicate with each other and a dose to one cell affects others surrounding it. Low Dose Radiation tells the story of the DOE program's development, the scientists who made it viable, and the fundamental results, highlighting lessons learned--including how that knowledge might be useful in a nuclear event. It describes the impact on current thinking, summarizing the data and providing a scientific basis for setting radiation standards. Although primarily a scientific text, the author believes that communicating with non-scientist decision makers about conclusions is extremely important. He hopes this history will illuminate crucial work that remains and stimulate new research. 
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