Airport Scanners and 12 Must-Know Radiation "Risks"
What's the truth?
CBS News asked leading radiation safety experts from MIT and the respected Health Physics Society for the real scoop on radiation levels from the new scanners and 12 other every day radiation sources, many of which you probably never thought about.
Keep reading, and be prepared for some big surprises...
Airport Scan
One scan from a typical "backscatter" security scanner might deliver 0.005 to 0.01 millirem - far, far below the 10,000 millirem that is considered the danger threshold.
"There is no known risk" from being scanned, Dr. Francis Marre, former director of radiation safety at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, tells CBS News. "It's never been demonstrated."
Radioactive Water
It turns out that pure drinking water contains trace amounts of radium and other radioactive elements.
Drinking three glasses of water a day for a year might give you a cumulative exposure of about 0.045 millirems, that's at least five times more than the dose from an airport scanner.
But keep in mind, it's still way beneath the 10,000 millirem line where there is danger.
Grand Central Tereminal
Nearby Power Plants
And because coal contains traces of radioactive substances, coal-fired power plants emit radiation too. In a recent test, people living within 50 miles of a coal-fired plant in Wyoming were shown to be exposed to 0.16 millirem.
A Day in the Life
In New York City and other communities at or near sea level, you might get about 0.8 millirem a day, at least 8 times the dose from airport scanners.
At higher elevations, the cosmic radiation is more intense - because there's less atmosphere above to shield you. In the "mile-high" city of Denver, for example, you might be exposed to 0.9 millirems a day.
Dental X-Ray
Sharing Your Bed
One year of bedding down with someone else might expose you to 2 millirems, at least 200 times the dose from an airport scanner.
Flying
That's because cosmic radiation to which we're all exposed every day gets more intense the higher you go. If you climb a mountain or go up in an airplane, your exposure will be elevated.
Taking a flight from New York to Los Angeles might expose you to between 3 and 4 millirems, at least 300 to 400 times higher than the airport scanner.
To put that level into context, one minute of flying at 35,000 feet might expose you to as much radiation as you'd get from one airport scan.
Chest X-Ray
Again, its all far more than an airport scanner.
Mammogram
Space Flight
CT Scan
How about a CT of the abdomen? That can deliver about 1,000 milirems. That's at least 100,000 more juice than an airport scanner.