Friday, December 3, 2010

Scanner Radiation Fears





This is a bit on all you want to know about scanners.  Most of us will be exposed to this device rarely, but a minority will be exposed many times.  We may be reassured that there is no risk and the risk mat be minimal but doubt and potential legal liability will continue.  I think passports should have a radiation counter built in.  That way everyone can check his exposure.


We likely should do the same with cell phones.  The science for radiation is affected by the natural counter activity associated with low exposure.   Statistical work and experimental design must correct for the effect and I do not think anyone has done so.  The real work has to be done with subjects with excessive exposure.

Some good work is been done on this and I hope to report on it.

Full-body scanners: we reveal all

18:08 18 November 2010 by Justin Mullins
For similar stories, visit the Crime and Forensics Topic Guide



The recent release of pictures taken by full-body scanners has outraged the travelling public and focused attention on the risks the devices may carry. New Scientist deals with the concerns

What are full-body scanners?

Remember the X-ray specs of science fiction comics that would let people see through walls and clothing? Full-body scanners are a bit like them. The scanners take advantage of the fact that at certain wavelengths, electromagnetic waves can pass through clothes but not through the skin, metal or substances such as drugs and explosives.

If your eyes were sensitive to these wavelengths like the scanners, every person you meet would appear naked, with pens, coins, belt buckles and the like magically festooned about their person. You would also be able to see if they were carrying a knife, gun or explosives.

What are the health concerns surrounding them?

There are two main types of full-body scanner. One uses X-rays while the other uses lower-energy millimetre wavelengths. X-rays are hazardous because their photons have enough energy to ionise atoms and break chemical bonds. That can cause damage to DNA that subsequently leads to cancer. The machines are deemed safe because the total dose that someone receives during a scan is tiny.

However, earlier this year, a group of scientists at the University of California, San Franciscoraised a number of concerns over X-ray scanners. They said the X-rays they use are low energy to ensure they bounce only off skin rather than passing through the body, to produce an image focused on objects concealed beneath clothes. This means that the entire dose that the person being scanned receives is concentrated on the skin rather than spread throughout their body. That could mean the skin receives a dose that is one or two orders of magnitude more than expected.

To many observers, the response of the US Food and Drug Administration failed to properly address these concerns.

Are there health concerns surrounding millimetre-wave scanners?

In theory, these ought to be safer than X-rays because millimetre photons do not have enough energy to break chemical bonds. Last year, however, researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico suggested that these low energy photons could damage DNA in an entirely novel way. They say that while these photons cannot break DNA, they can shake it. This shaking may be so strong that it unzips the two strands in DNA, interfering with the genetic machinery that keeps cells working and healthy.

The team at Los Alamos did their calculations for submillimetre or terahertz waves,  whose photons are slightly more energetic than those of millimetre waves. Their results are probabilistic rather than deterministic, they say. This explains why some experiments show that terahertz waves can damage DNA while other, practically identical studies show nothing.

While terahertz full-body scanners are not yet widely used, the work does show that the effects of electromagnetic waves on DNA are not fully understood.

Are there alternatives to full-body scanners?

Travellers can opt out of being scanned and choose to be frisked instead. In the US, one group is hoping to highlight the controversy over full-body scanners by encouraging everyone travelling on 24 November to elect to be frisked.

What about privacy concerns?

The US Transportation Security Administration admits that the scanners have the ability to store and print images. But it says this capability is used only when the machines are tested and is switched off at all other times. Critics point out that it isn't clear how difficult it is to reactivate this capability or how the TSA prevents employees from recording the images with another device such as a cellphone camera.

Earlier this week, hundreds of images taken by a body scanner used by marshals at a courthouse in Florida appeared on the internet. The TSA says it would be impossible for a similar leak to occur from airport scanners. It's fair to say the public is yet to be reassured.


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