background radiation

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background radiation

A scientist measures background radiation in a forest clearing.

Definition

Noun: 1. Low-level, ever-present ionizing radiation from natural and artificial sources: This refers to the constant, low-intensity radiation that exists in the environment from sources not part of a specific experiment or observation. It originates from natural materials like rocks and cosmic rays, as well as from human-made sources like past nuclear tests.

Usage
  • Background radiation is a fundamental concept in physics, environmental science, and radiological protection.
  • It is used to describe the baseline level of radiation that must be accounted for and subtracted from measurements to determine the radiation emitted by a specific source of interest.
  • It is typically measured in units like sieverts (Sv) or millisieverts (mSv) per year.
Examples
  • The Geiger counter reading included both the sample's radioactivity and the ever-present background radiation.
  • Scientists must carefully measure the background radiation in the laboratory before conducting sensitive experiments.
  • The average person receives a dose of about 3 mSv per year from natural background radiation.
Advanced Usage
  • "To shield against background radiation": To use protective materials (like lead) to reduce the influence of ambient radiation on a measurement.
    • The detector was placed in a lead castle to shield it from background radiation.
  • "Cosmic background radiation": A specific type of natural background radiation originating from outer space. (Note: This is a compound term listed separately as a variant).
  • In a figurative sense, it can describe a constant, underlying level of any pervasive signal or activity that interferes with specific observations.
    • In the crowded market, the chatter of the crowd was the financial reporter's background radiation.
Variants and Related Words
  • Cosmic background radiation (n): The microwave radiation uniformly detected from all directions in space, a remnant of the Big Bang.
  • Terrestrial radiation (n): Background radiation originating from radioactive materials in the Earth's crust, such as radon gas.
  • Background count (n): The measured rate of ionizing radiation from background sources.
Synonyms
  • Ambient radiation
  • Environmental radiation
  • Natural radiation (though this excludes the artificial component)
Related Phrases
  • Background noise: While not a phrasal verb, this is a closely related concept in signal processing, referring to unwanted interference that is always present, analogous to background radiation in physics.
  • To subtract the background: A common procedural phrase meaning to account for and remove the background radiation signal from total measurements.
    • After we subtract the background, the net signal from the sample is very weak.
background radiation

A scientist measures background radiation in a forest clearing.

Noun
  1. radiation coming from sources other than those being observed