A University of Glasgow academic is flying to Japan to visit the Fukushima Prefecture, where three nuclear reactors were seriously damaged in the earthquake and subsequent tsunami of March 2011.
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Fukushima visit for University of Glasgow scientist
28 February 2012
David Sanderson, Professor of Environmental Physics at the Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre (SUERC), will be in Japan between 28 February and 9 March following an invitation from Fukushima University, where scientists are working to map and measure the area’s radiation levels.
He will tour Fukushima City and surrounding areas and deliver speeches to academics and government officials on environmental radiation and how mobile and airborne gamma ray spectrometry techniques can be used to map areas affected by radiation.
He will take a portable gamma ray sensor system to demonstrate a method of radiation measurement developed at SUERC. The information collected by the backpack-mounted sensor can be used to build a visual map of the radiation levels in any given location. Professor Sanderson expects to examine radiation levels on the campus of Fukushima University and in areas within the prefecture which have been affected by the accident.
Significant amounts of radioactive material were released into the air last year when three of the reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant melted down and caused explosions. Scientists at SUERC, a collaboration between the Universities of Glasgow and Edinburgh, subsequently detected radioactive iodine particles from the plant in the atmosphere over Glasgow, which had been carried by air currents from Fukushima.
Professor Sanderson said: “After the earthquake struck and the scale of the problems unfolding at Fukushima became clear, the team at SUERC helped advise UK authorities of elevated levels of radiation found in Scotland and offered assistance to the International Atomic Energy Agency.
“I’ll be visiting the week before the first anniversary of the earthquake on 11 March. I’ll be speaking about SUERC’s work and the environmental consequences of past nuclear accidents to audiences at Fukushima University and the National Institute for Enviromental Science, and visiting the Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Research Council in Tsukuba,.
“I expect the visit will provide a valuable exchange of information and ideas with Japanese academics as well as an opportunity to see for myself how the area is dealing with the lingering after-effects of the earthquake.
“At the end of March, four scientists from Fukushima University will come to East Kilbride to visit SUERC’s headquarters. I look forward to continuing our conversations and exploring new opportunities for collaborations which could be of wide-ranging benefit in the field of environmental radiation detection. ”
Professor Sanderson’s vis
He will tour Fukushima City and surrounding areas and deliver speeches to academics and government officials on environmental radiation and how mobile and airborne gamma ray spectrometry techniques can be used to map areas affected by radiation.
He will take a portable gamma ray sensor system to demonstrate a method of radiation measurement developed at SUERC. The information collected by the backpack-mounted sensor can be used to build a visual map of the radiation levels in any given location. Professor Sanderson expects to examine radiation levels on the campus of Fukushima University and in areas within the prefecture which have been affected by the accident.
Significant amounts of radioactive material were released into the air last year when three of the reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant melted down and caused explosions. Scientists at SUERC, a collaboration between the Universities of Glasgow and Edinburgh, subsequently detected radioactive iodine particles from the plant in the atmosphere over Glasgow, which had been carried by air currents from Fukushima.
Professor Sanderson said: “After the earthquake struck and the scale of the problems unfolding at Fukushima became clear, the team at SUERC helped advise UK authorities of elevated levels of radiation found in Scotland and offered assistance to the International Atomic Energy Agency.
“I’ll be visiting the week before the first anniversary of the earthquake on 11 March. I’ll be speaking about SUERC’s work and the environmental consequences of past nuclear accidents to audiences at Fukushima University and the National Institute for Enviromental Science, and visiting the Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Research Council in Tsukuba,.
“I expect the visit will provide a valuable exchange of information and ideas with Japanese academics as well as an opportunity to see for myself how the area is dealing with the lingering after-effects of the earthquake.
“At the end of March, four scientists from Fukushima University will come to East Kilbride to visit SUERC’s headquarters. I look forward to continuing our conversations and exploring new opportunities for collaborations which could be of wide-ranging benefit in the field of environmental radiation detection. ”
Professor Sanderson’s vis
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