Thanks, all.
I think we all agree that the gauges are obviously pretty safe when you shield, keep your distance, and limit your time of exposure.
I don't really recall that comment from the safety trainer being intended as a scare tactic of any kind. It seemed more like just a matter of fact thing they mentioned. If anything, it seemed like he was making a case for why we had to be there taking the course...so a few years later, out of nowhere, I get a random thought in my head (that doesn't really matter anymore to me directly):
If nuke gauges are so "low level" why, then, all the costly regulations surrounding them? Are they justified? Was that safety trainer even correct at all?
Sort of like a "fact check" more than a decade later... (I certainly never claimed I was that quick....)
I noticed that one would require about 500,000 to 1,000,000 mrem of exposure in a short period of time to cause radiation poisoning, extreme damage, or death (if that exposure is directed to a vital part of the body somewhere). It seems that even with the 8miC or so cesium source, at point blank range over the heart, it could deliver that amount of mrem over the course of 24 hours. (feel free to check my math and concepts, if you wish, as I used an online calculator to convert the source strength to mrem in terms of exposure time-I may be way off somewhere in my understanding).
I think that for all of us, if we took the proper precautions, then we received something on the order of what they say in the manual (an additional 100 mrem or so over the course of a year; much less than anything that would cause damage, and on par with what we receive in a year from natural sources already).
So in the end, I'm at least a little more satisfied that the costly regulations are justified to some degree, and that safety trainer probably was speaking the truth!
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