Potential health risks from postulated accidents involving the Pu-238 RTG (Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator) on the Ulysses solar exploration mission
Abstract
Potential radiation impacts from launch of the Ulysses solar exploration experiment were evaluated using eight postulated accident scenarios. Lifetime individual dose estimates rarely exceeded 1 mrem. Most of the potential health effects would come from inhalation exposures immediately after an accident, rather than from ingestion of contaminated food or water, or from inhalation of resuspended plutonium from contaminated ground. For local Florida accidents (that is, during the first minute after launch), an average source term accident was estimated to cause a total added cancer risk of up to 0.2 deaths. For accidents at later times after launch, a worldwide cancer risk of up to three cases was calculated (with a four in a million probability). Upper bound estimates were calculated to be about 10 times higher.
- Publication:
-
Presented at the 8th Symposium on Space Nuclear Power Systems
- Pub Date:
- November 1990
- Bibcode:
- 1990snps.symp....6G
- Keywords:
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- Accidents;
- Radiation Damage;
- Radiation Hazards;
- Risk;
- Thermoelectricity;
- Ulysses Mission;
- Breathing;
- Cancer;
- Earth Atmosphere;
- Meteorology;
- Nuclear and High-Energy Physics