Wednesday, January 08, 2014

An odd thing to be wrong about

N-test legacy in stratosphere bigger than thought

It was previously thought that radionuclides—radioactive atoms which can take decades or thousands of years to degrade—were present in the only at negligible levels.
It was also believed that levels of these pollutants were higher in the troposphere, the layer of the atmosphere that is closest to the ground, than in the stratosphere. Both ideas turn out to be wrong, according to the new study, whose authors also found no likelihood of a hazard to health.
Radiation levels in the stratosphere are "more than three orders of magnitude higher than previously thought," study co-author Jose Corcho of the Swiss Federal Office for Civil Protection told AFP.
Somehow, I expected scientists to have a better grip on this topic than they appear to have had.

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