CR3 News Magazine 2022 VOL 4: SEPTEMBER -- RADON AND SCHOOLS | Page 29

Radon in child care centers:

An examination of state

laws and regulations in the United States

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1st Place - Prevent Radon, Before It Gets You PSA - Valley High School-2017

About the video

UNDER

an "A"

4 pCi/L

test for radon

NOW!

Radon has a half-life of about four days—half of a given quantity of it breaks down every four days. When radon undergoes radioactive decay, it emits ionizing radiation in the form of alpha particles. It also produces short-lived decay products, often called progeny or daughters, some of which are also radioactive.

Unlike radon, the progeny are not gases and can easily attach to dust and other particles. Those particles can be transported by air and can also be breathed.

The decay of progeny continues until stable, non-radioactive progeny are formed. At each step in the decay process, radiation is released.

Sometimes, the term radon is used in a broad sense, referring to radon and its radioactive progeny all at once. When testing measures radiation from the progeny, rather than radon itself, the measurements are usually expressed in working level (WL) units. When radiation from radon is measured directly, the amount is usually expressed in picocuries per liter of air (pCi/L).

... continued from pg 28.

Daycares