Re: What "might happen" with the Japanese Nuclear plants?
You have to take into account that the mortality risk is measured per picocurie (the unit intake in pCi), and the activity of these Iodine isotopes is 0.00018 Ci/g (curies per gram) for I129 vs 130000 Ci/g for I131 (a difference of about 700 million in radioactivity), which means that the mortality risk of I129 is actually quite a bit lower than I131
EDIT: To put things into perspective, you might compare the numbers to those of naturally existing Potassium-40 (see how the mortality risk seems larger than that of Iodine at first glance, but of course it's again less radioactive), which is present (and radioactive) in all animal (including human) and plant tissue...among other things. Even though it's half-life is 1.3 billion years, people don't seem to be that worried about it:
http://www.ead.anl.gov/pub/doc/potassium.pdf
Originally posted by GreyGeek
EDIT: To put things into perspective, you might compare the numbers to those of naturally existing Potassium-40 (see how the mortality risk seems larger than that of Iodine at first glance, but of course it's again less radioactive), which is present (and radioactive) in all animal (including human) and plant tissue...among other things. Even though it's half-life is 1.3 billion years, people don't seem to be that worried about it:
http://www.ead.anl.gov/pub/doc/potassium.pdf
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