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Offline Rennhack

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NukeWorker Slang
« on: May 16, 2002, 10:37 »
A Guide to NukeWorker Slang
(Please, no funny stuff, keep that in the other forums)

PCM = Personnel Contamination Monitor (Something that measures the amount of contamination on your skin and cloths.)
RCA = Radiologically Controlled Area (An area controlled for radiological purposes.)
RRA = Radiologically Restricted Area (Mostly the same as RCA)
WBC = Whole Body Counter (It measures the amount of radiation emitted from your body, from the radioactive material in your body, i.e. K-40 (Potassium, like that found in Bananas and venison.)
DFR = hehehehe
Frisker = A hand held contamination monitor.
NRC = Nuclear Regulatory Commission
INPO = Institute of Nuclear Power Operations
Rem = Unit of measure of radiation deposited into your body (exposure/dose). You are allowed 5 Rem per year to your whole body, and 50 Rem per year to extremities.
mRem = A milli-Rem (1000 mRem = 1 Rem)
DOE = Department of Energy (Also slang for a site operated or licensed by them).
BWR = A Boiling Water Reactor, a type of design of Nuclear power plant where the water is allowed to boil in the primary loop.
PWR = Pressurized Water Reactor, a type of design of Nuclear power plant where the water is pressurized in the main loop, and exchanges its heat to a secondary ‘loop’ in a steam generator.
Hot = Contaminated
Screaming = Very contaminated
Crapped up = Contaminated


I hope this helps you non-nuke types :)
« Last Edit: Aug 09, 2004, 11:34 by Rennhack »

Offline SloGlo

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #1 on: May 16, 2002, 12:52 »
RMA= Radioactive Materials Area (an area where there is    material emitting radiation, NOT a contaminated area)
CSCA= Controlled Surface Contamintion Area (area that is contaminated, that is allowed to be contaminated due to specific reasoning, i.e. inside of a PWR containment building- too many manrem would be expended for the benefit derived.
DAC= Derived Airborne Concentration (the concentration of radioactive material in air, by isotopic analysis)
ManRem= Radiation Dose received, totalled up for statistical analysis, /item, like a job, a site, a company,etc.
NFG= what is written on a broken meter
OOS= Out Of Service, what a geek writes on a broken meter
PC= Protective Clothing, also know as Anti-C (Anti-Contamination, very old school)
DOD= Department of Defense, see DOE
Teletector= extendable GM tube instrument capable of reading to 1000 R/Hr, also called a tallywacker and is good for maintaining control of workers from a distance.
Face Pump= respirator
Lead Coffin, Lead Sled= Metal 5 sided box one would lie in to receive a Whole Body Count, very old school
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Offline idrum4food

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #2 on: May 16, 2002, 01:59 »
BRT = Big Round Thing refering to the containment building where the reactor is located.

Offline Rennhack

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #3 on: May 16, 2002, 08:24 »
BFRT = See BRT
Can = Building where the nuclear reactor is contained. (PWR)
Drywell = BWR version of the Can

ScottBob

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #4 on: May 17, 2002, 11:43 »
Annulus- That 3 foot wide curved "hallway" between the concrete outer containment and the steel inner containment of the reactor building at a BWR plant. Great place for nuke workers to leave their ubiquitous graffiti on the walls (such as "Joe was here for RF-6, RF-7 and RF-8", etc.) Usually reeks of urine, and those who enter will become crapped up from head to toe, not from anything reactor produced, but from the radon that seeps from the concrete walls.

Crud- Activated corrosion products that are heavier than water and settle out in bends, drains and other low spots or slow areas in the plumbing.

Crud Trap- Any part of the system that was deliberately engineered to catch crud. Usually does not work, is often cleaner than the areas it was designed to protect.

Bathtub Ring- The layer of crud that forms right at the water line of the spent fuel pool, refueling pool, supression pool, the swimming pool at the hotel where nuke workers stay, etc.

SCRAM- Safety Control Rod Axe Man, holdover from the days when prototype reactors had control rods that were held in place with ropes. In case of emergency, someone would cut the ropes with an axe to allow the control rods to drop into the pile, stopping the nuclear reaction. To this day the term "Scram" is still used for emergency reactor shutdown.

Offline idrum4food

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #5 on: May 18, 2002, 01:18 »
RHR - Residual Heat Removal or Rest Here and Relax

DainJer

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #6 on: May 19, 2002, 03:03 »
Fits right in with the
STAR= Stop Think Act,  Review.
« Last Edit: Aug 09, 2004, 11:36 by Rennhack »

Offline RDTroja

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #7 on: May 21, 2002, 11:38 »
Just to show how things can get confused, I had always heard that SCRAM stood for Super-Critical Reactor Axe Man - same function, different source for the acronym. Started with Enrico Fermi's original 'atomic pile' under the bleachers at University of Chicago.

And CRUD supposedly stood for Chalk River Unidentified Deposits, named for some unidentified materials found down river from an experimental station many years ago.

moodusjack -- are you calling me an old timer? I knew Ron (at least one of them) before he got to Pilgrim. We arrived there together in 1978 when ALARA stood for As Long As Robin Approves. (Robin was RPM at the time... can't remember his last name.) Then Ron took over as ALARA Engineer and the acronym changed.

By the way, ALARA was originally ALAP - As Low As Practicable. But nobody knew what that meant. I guess I am an old-timer.
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Offline SloGlo

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #8 on: May 21, 2002, 12:25 »
rdtroja, I am with you on the SCRAM, and chicago stadium was the first application.  iffen any nuke history buffs get out the picture (pen & ink, no cameras allowed, even then) you will see the SCRAM at the ready.  However, to be fair to ScottBob, i have heard his version also.  also in align on the CRUD.  
and iffen yer an old timer.........nah, ya ain't no old timer! ;D
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Offline Rennhack

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SCRAM
« Reply #9 on: May 21, 2002, 09:04 »
SCRAM:

The first sustained nuclear chain reaction was accomplished At 9.45 on Dec. 2, 1942. This event, at the University of Chicago's squash courts under Stagg Field's bleachers known as Chicago Pile-1 (CP-1) was the birth of the term SCRAM.

The NRC, Fermi, Gollnick, and “Mr. Scram” himself - Dr. Norman Hilberry, doctor of physics (The actual SCRAM Tech) defines SCRAM as the Safety Control Rod Axe Man.

There is a reference that claims that Fermi used the term “Safety Cut Rope Axe Man” that also claims that they used a professional logger.  This is a miss-quote. The Axe Man was a physicist named Dr. Norman Hilberry, who himself says that it stands for “Safety Control Rod Axe Man”.


Other legends contend that "Scram" is an acronym for "Start Cutting Right Away, Man", "safety control reactor axe man", “SuperCritical Reactor Axe Man”,  “Safety Critical Reactor Ax Man “, “SuiCidal Reaction Axe Man “, “Shutdown Control Rod Axe Man”, “Secondary Control Rod Axe Man”, “Safety Control Reactor Axe Man”, “Safety Control Reserve Axed Man”, and “Safety Crew Reactor Axe Man” However, the term ‘reactor’ wasn’t even in use then, so those are probably backronyms.

http://www.orau.com/ptp/articlesstories/names.htm#scram

http://www.ornl.gov/reporter/no19/scram.htm

http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/basic-ref/glossary/scram.html

http://users.owt.com/smsrpm/nksafe/forties.html
http://

http://info.astrian.net/jargon/terms/s/scram_switch.html


http://www.wowpage.com/tmi/core.html

L. Marshall Libby The Uranium People, Crane, Russak & Co., 1979.
Gollnick page 44



Offline Rennhack

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #10 on: May 21, 2002, 09:08 »
Crud
A colloquial term for corrosion and wear products (rust particles, etc.) that become radioactive (i.e., activated) when exposed to radiation. Because the activated deposits were first discovered at Chalk River, a Canadian nuclear plant, "crud" has been used as shorthand for Chalk River Unidentified Deposits.

http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/basic-ref/glossary/crud.html



CRUD: "...an acronym for 'Chalk River Unidentified Deposits.' ...black, highly radioactive substances found on the inside of piping and components at the Chalk River nuclear reactor ... CRUD has now become a standard industry term referring to minute, solid, corrosion products that travel into the reactor core, become highly radioactive, and then flow out of the reactor into other systems in the plant. ... CRUD can settle out in crevices or plate-out on the inside of piping in considerable quantities ... The major components of CRUD are iron, cobalt, chrome, and manganese ... CRUD is a concentrated source of radiation and represents a significant radiological risk because of its insolubility."

(United States Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Testimony of James K. Joosten, September 15, 1997, pg. 13-14).

moodusjack

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #11 on: May 22, 2002, 08:18 »
Let's spot the real old timers.  Forget that sievert, gray, rem and rad stuff...who remembers REP (Roentgen Equivalent Physical)?

Offline SloGlo

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #12 on: May 30, 2002, 09:51 »
Senior-junior = someone on their last outage as a junior who will (hopefully ::)) become a Senior on the next job.
quando omni flunkus moritati

dubble eye, dubble yew, dubble aye!

dew the best ya kin, wit watt ya have, ware yinze are!

wave_theory

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #13 on: May 30, 2002, 08:40 »
Havent seen these yet:

Burned out- when you get near or exceed your allowable dose.

Otto- the guy at the control point when you are taking a break.

Sponge- someone who gets more dose than they should. Often describes people who associate dose received with work accomplished.

Radio- be careful if you do this, could mean DFR

Gassed up- usually happens when you are leaving the RCA to use the restroom.

Anybody know where that term "radio" came from? ???

Offline SloGlo

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #14 on: May 31, 2002, 05:39 »
"radio" comes from the early days of ALARA, before the achronym became popular.  it involved the use of 2way radios so that a field tech could survey for more than one individual or group.  the tech would survey and then radio the data back to the control point(s).  got slanged to meaning pull a survey out of the air, to have done a survey without personally entering the area involved.
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Offline RDTroja

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #15 on: May 31, 2002, 07:47 »
"Radio" has been around forever, even predating nukes, anywhere chemistry samples are taken. The slang meaining is as SloGlo suggests.

I had a very good friend (no longer with us) who had a pen with a broken-off car radio antenna attached that he used as a joke. He would extend the antenna, hold up the pen and then use it to write down the results that 'came in.' Got great reactions from some people...
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mikeland

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #16 on: Jul 24, 2002, 01:14 »
Hmm - might find some accelerator terms ...

Tower - Tower for a Pelletron .... do not stand near ...
Schedule - Beam run times/dates for various species ...
Source - Ion source for accelerator ...
Tube - accelerator tube ...
Tank - Insulator (SF6) for Pelletron ...
Magnet - main bending magnet ...
Charge State - beam charge of species ...
Strippers - Carbon Vane foils for increasing charge in Pelletron - and hence energy of beam ...
Beam Line - line of tubing - with magnets ...
Target Area - place not to stand in ... but many do ...
Beam Dump - yet another area not to stand in - can be identified by lack of concrete and or moderators ... always points in the unsafest direction ...

Doors or Gates - lockdown doors when neutrons exceed 10 micros/hr - of course detectors don't work ...

Control Room - where the children can play ...

DCP - Software that crashes on the VAX ...

TLD - Badges that are not to be worn ...

Resonator - Liquid cooled booster 15 MeV - or 300 MeV for the whole set ... pump out x rays from hell ...

Linac - Linear Accelerator - staff take holidays when turned on ...

ARPANSA - someone who took over the can from ANSTO ...

Beam Current - usually mcroamps - should be pico amps ...


Offline SloGlo

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #17 on: Aug 21, 2002, 07:03 »
Sucking Rubber... to wear a respirator.  when explaining communication problems while wearing a respirator, tell them it's like going drinking with a group of scots ;D
quando omni flunkus moritati

dubble eye, dubble yew, dubble aye!

dew the best ya kin, wit watt ya have, ware yinze are!

Offline Rain Man

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #18 on: Aug 21, 2002, 09:30 »
Breaking Circle William:  A term used by an old ELT friend for pulling your respirator away from your face to throw up after a late night and too many toddies.
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187

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #19 on: Jan 10, 2003, 04:13 »
Crapped-up!! Refering to being contaminated! [smiley=tp.gif]

kspero

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #20 on: Jan 13, 2003, 01:11 »
...adding to the alphabet soup:

PIC - Pocket Ion Chamber
ED - Electronic dosimeter
EPD - Electronic personal/pocket dosimeter
DRD - Direct reading dosimeter
DAD - Digital alarming dosimeter
EAD - Electronic alarming dosimeter
HPB - HP in a Box

cotob

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #21 on: Jan 21, 2003, 10:18 »
On the subject of CRUD...nobody here in at AECL in Chalk River is willing to take credit for coming up with coining "Chalk River Unidentified Deposits".  The generally accepted story according to the oldtimers here is that the U.S. Navy came up with the acronym.  They were doing some fuel testing in our research reactor at the time when CRUD was discovered.  As a result we are now recognized as "world leaders" when it comes to the subject of unwanted deposits or impurities in reactor systems and we do alot of work with EPRI.  We don't do toilets though...

Offline dave99

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #22 on: Feb 09, 2003, 12:28 »
How about Fuel Fleas, Specks or the red Death (the Pink corrosion residue left over after a BWR Recirc system Chemical decon). All are highly radioactive, invisible, electrostatically charged particles.

sammoyers

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #23 on: Jun 03, 2003, 07:56 »
Got a few to add as an "Old Timer"

"The Green Wave" or
"Green Machine"               Hydro Nuclear Services

"Junior-Techtor"  A junior tech with a "PIC-6", head sets and a rope around the waist. Used to send into unknown areas when it would cost to much to lose a remote operated robot. Send in the junior and pull he/she out with the rope when they stop responding. ;D [smiley=hop_fire.gif]

"PIC-6" Old Eberline meter with two scales, 0 - 1000 mr/hr and 0 - 1000 R/hr. Also Known as a "Doorstop" because that's all it was good for.

ALARA at River Bend in the late '80s; As Low As Raymond Albert" After six years in the navy and several years at the Bend... his lifetime dose was under 100 mr. (67 mr if I remember right.) Now THATS ALARA!!!!!

"Road Whore" Road tech that would work for any company as long as the price was right, usually bounced from company to company, back in the day when a good portion of techs worked for one company.

"BAB" Beta Aerosol Beacon - A "CAM" (Continuous Air Monitor) that spent two hours in repairs for every 10 minutes of operating time. A real pain in the butt to get working right.

"BOHICA" Bend Over Here It Comes Again [smiley=shocked.gif]

"Attitude Adjustment" A big party held, usually mid-outage, (back when thet lasted 4 to 6 months at a time) with large quantities of Alcohol and recreational pharmaceticals. Obviously Pre-FFD. (Though I don't think one had anything to do with the other...NAH!!)  ::)  [smiley=beerchug.gif]  (b)  (d)  [smiley=huepfenjump1.gif]

allforthenukie

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #24 on: Aug 05, 2003, 01:51 »
Munchkin Land, a place in the plant where the ceiling is so low that no normal person can stand upright. Like it was designed for munchkins to work in.

FishBowl, RP checkpoint at RCA access.

BetaBlockers, your safety glasses, shield the lenses of your eyes from beta radiation.

HeadKnocker, a pointy edged I beam that is strategically located at the top of a platform ladder, ussually right at about forehead level.

HoneyWagon, the sweet smelling tanker truck that comes to pump out the portajohns.

Shine, a "beam" of gamma radiation, like the "shine" in front of a steam generator manway opening for example.

RailBirds, plant bigshots who tend to flock to catwalks and other overhead perches to watch you do critical outage work activities.

Hutch

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #25 on: Aug 05, 2003, 02:49 »
frisker- meter that measures contamination
snoopy(aka an/pdr-70)-meter used to measure neutron radiation/only meter to read in mrem/hr instead of mr/hr...i think its that way in the shipyard anyway.
RLW - radioactive liquid waste
CPW- controled pure water(what you get after proc. RLW)
PET - portable effluent tank(used transport RLW)
HRA-high rad area
LA - limited avalibility(what happens when an RCT messes up a little)
OU-operatonaly unavalable(what happens when an RCT
messes up medium)
DQ-disqualified(what happens when an RCT screws the pooch)

Offline darkmatter

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #26 on: Nov 06, 2003, 10:00 »
BOHICA: Bend Over, Here it comes again

DILLIGAFF: Does it look like I give a flying F***

SSDD: Same Sh*t, Different Day

I had it, You got It: Elaborate shift turnover

SOS: Same Old Sh*t

Catch some Zoomies: High Dose job

Suck Rubber: wearing a respirator

Suck Up: Bucking for a promotion

Desk Jockey: An "expert" working out of a cubicle

Cubicle Warrior: An elevated egotistic Desk Jockey
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http://darkmatter.nukeworker.net.istemp.com  this will get you there, but I can't update it anymore. Maybe nukeworker will host personal sites eventully

Wolfen

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #27 on: Nov 10, 2003, 11:44 »
If memory serves me right (and it seldom does, anymore) ALAP was addressed in the original 1973 revision to 10CFR20.

Nobody at the time understood it, nor did anyone pay any attention to it. As Low As Practical, according to management back then, was anything less than 12 rem/yr.

Offline RDTroja

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #28 on: Nov 10, 2003, 12:05 »
ALAP was actually 'As Low As Practicable' which probably explains its demise -- no one could spell or pronounce it.
"I won't eat anything that has intelligent life, but I'd gladly eat a network executive or a politician."

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Wolfen

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #29 on: Nov 10, 2003, 01:58 »
'As Low As Practicable' I stand corrected.  You are absolutely right.  "Practicable"  Wow, who thought that was a good idea???

Wolfen

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #30 on: Nov 10, 2003, 02:05 »
UTM - Untold millions.  Used on survey maps at certain DOE facilities to define alpha contamination levels - unofficially of course. <S>

damad1

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #31 on: Aug 05, 2004, 07:43 »
Smoothie: A Reactor Operator (Navy) Plays with electronics and performs no real work, AKA Twdgit.


Also had a plant thumbrule:
One RAD to your nads and you'll be very sad!

Offline Melissa White

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Re: NukeWorker Slang
« Reply #32 on: Aug 06, 2004, 02:41 »
I pulled this article off of the HPS web site: Note: The complete article also can be found on the ORAU Web site, and I have edited it so it will fit here on Nukeworker


Why Did They Call It That?
Paul Frame
The Origin of Selected Radiological and Nuclear Terms

Alpha, Beta, and Gamma Radiation
The first reference in the scientific literature to alpha and beta radiation is found in the following statement by Ernest Rutherford (1899): "These experiments show that the uranium radiation is complex and that there are present at least two distinct types of radiation—one that is very readily absorbed, which will be termed for convenience the alpha-radiation, and the other of more penetrative character which will be termed the beta-radiation.

The physicist and historian Alfred Romer (1960) commented that the name alpha radiation had been chosen for "no particular reason." While it is true that Rutherford didn't explain why he chose the first letters of the Greek alphabet, Röntgen had set a precedent for an alphabetical designation with the name X rays, and Rutherford, like many of his generation, had studied the Greek language. In 1902, Rutherford moved on to the third letter of the Greek alphabet when he applied the name gamma rays to the very penetrating radiation described by Villard. Soon thereafter, J.J. Thompson employed the term delta rays, and today we have a veritable alphabet soup of subatomic particles.

Becquerel (Bq)
The SI special name for a unit of activity equal to 1 dps, the becquerel superceded the curie.

In a letter sent to numerous journals in August of 1975, the International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements (ICRU) stated that the General Conference of Weights and Measures had adopted the ICRU's recommendation that the SI unit of activity take the name the becquerel. The ICRU explained, "Antoine Henri Becquerel (1852-1908) discovered radioactivity in 1896 (‘rayons de Becquerel') and was given the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1903 together with Marie and Pierre Curie." Since the Curies and Becquerel shared the first Nobel Prize awarded for work with radioactive substances, it might be considered appropriate that it was the becquerel that superceded the curie.

Curie (Ci)
A unit of activity equal to 3.7×1010 disintegrations per second, the curie has been superceded by the becquerel.

The original intent of the Standards Committee that defined the curie was for it to be based on a smaller activity, similar to that routinely employed in the laboratory. But Marie Curie had other ideas. If it was to bear the name Curie, it had to be large (Badash 1969)!

In the October 1910 issue of Nature, Ernest Rutherford, who chaired the Standards Committee, said: "In the course of the Congress it was suggested that the name Curie, in honor of the late Prof. [Pierre] Curie, should if be possible, be employed for a quantity of radium or the emanation [radon]. This matter was left for the consideration of the standards committee. The latter suggested that the name Curie be used as a new unit to express the quantity or mass of radium emanation in equilibrium with one gram of radium (element)."

Fission
In late 1938, Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch determined that it was energetically possible for uranium atoms to split in two when struck by neutrons. To observe this phenomenon, Frisch, working in the basement of Niels Bohr's Institute for Theoretical Physics in Copenhagen, placed a piece of uranium next to the chamber of a proportional counter and exposed the uranium to neutrons. Using an oscilloscope, Frisch looked for the extremely large pulses coming from the detector chamber that would indicate the energetic fragments of the splitting atoms. Among the inhabitants of the Institute who went down to the basement to see what Frisch was up to was the biologist William Arnold (Arnold 1996; Ermanc 1989). At first, all Arnold saw on the oscilloscope screen was a series of small pulses produced by uranium's alpha particles. But then, at Frisch's suggestion, he picked up a neutron source by the handle and put it next to the uranium. The world changed! Huge pulses began appearing—pulses far larger than anything produced by the alpha particles—pulses produced by the fragments of the splitting uranium nuclei! Later that day, Frisch tracked Arnold down and said something to the effect "You're supposed to be some kind of biologist. What is the term you use to describe dividing bacteria?" Arnold replied, "Binary fission." Frisch then asked if the word "fission" would suffice and Arnold agreed that it would.

Gray (Gy)
The SI special name for the unit of absorbed dose, equal to 1 J kg-1, the gray superceded the rad.

In a letter sent to numerous journals in August of 1975, the International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements (ICRU) stated that the General Conference of Weights and Measures had adopted the ICRU's recommendation that the SI unit of absorbed dose take the name the gray. In an explanatory note, the ICRU commented, "Louis Harold Gray (1905-1965) made one of the most fundamental contributions to radiation dosimetry, the principle now known as the Bragg-Gray Principle." It didn't hurt that Gray had once served as Vice-Chairman of the ICRU.

Health Physics
Health Physics refers to the field of radiation protection. Appropriateness of the name has been a matter of some debate (Taylor 1982).

The term Health Physics originated in the Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago in 1942, but it is not known exactly why, or by whom, the term was chosen. Most likely, the term was coined by Robert Stone or Arthur Compton. Stone was the head of the Health Division, of which Health Physics was one of four sections. Arthur Compton was the head of the Metallurgical Laboratory.

Rad
A unit of absorbed dose, the rad replaced the rep but it has now been superceded by the gray. The name rad was adopted by the ICRU in 1953 at the Seventh International Congress of Radiology. There appears to have been no documented discussion regarding the use of this name prior to the 1953 meeting, even though it was determined earlier at an ICRU meeting in 1951 that there was a need for such a unit. Aside from the use of rad some three decades earlier as a unit relating to mouse tumors, the rad seems to have made its first appearance in the ICRU report of the 1953 meeting. The reason for selecting the name was not given, nor is it explained in subsequent ICRU, ICRP, or for that matter, NCRP reports

There is a widespread belief that rad is an acronym for "radiation absorbed dose." This seems reasonable since many other contemporary units (the reb, rep and rem) were acronyms. However, if rad were an acronym, one would expect the ICRU to have identified it as such—something they did not do. If, on the other hand, the rad was just a convenient and concise name, there would be no reason for the ICRU to have explained it. The lack of any explanation in the official literature for the name is totally inconsistent with the idea that the rad is an acronym.

This issue is addressed explicitly by Dr. Lauriston Taylor, Chairman Emeritus of the ICRU (1990). In this article, Dr.Taylor states: "The term rad was simply suggested as a word by itself. Since then it has frequently been improperly referred to as an abbreviation for "radiation absorbed dose." This is simply incorrect."

Radiological (Radiation) Safety Officer
Radiological Safety Officer was the title given to the military officer who was responsible for radiological safety during the U.S. atomic weapons tests in the Pacific during the late 1940s.

The earliest use of this term that I know of was in Joint Task Force 7, the group established in 1947 to oversee Operation Sandstone at Enewetak. The regulations for Operation Sandstone read in part: "Permissible radiological exposure is established at 0.1 roentgens per twenty-four (24) hours. Under unusual circumstances, the Scientific Director and the Radiological Safety Officer may authorize a total exposure up to three (3) roentgens."

As Barton Hacker observed (1994), the regulation's careful wording was chosen to accommodate the sometimes conflicting needs of the military and scientific participants in the atomic tests. The military, represented by the Radiological Safety Officer, insisted on the ultimate authority for radiological safety, but the civilian scientists, represented by the Scientific Director, frequently needed to enter contaminated areas to perform their experiments and make radiation measurements. The physicist Karol Froman served as Joint Task Force 7's Scientific Director, and Col. James Cooney of the Army Medical Corps served as the Radiological Safety Officer. Cooney's position was essentially the same as that of Col. Stafford Warren in Joint Task Force 1 during Operation Crossroads at Bikini in 1946. Warren had been known as the Radiological Safety Advisor.

A distinction was sometimes attempted between the military's radiological measurements performed for the purpose of safety and the civilian radiation measurements performed for scientific purposes. Long after the atomic tests were completed in the Pacific, the military tended to favor the word "radiological" over "radiation."

Rem
A unit of the quantity dose equivalent, the rem replaced the reb, but the rem has now been superceded by the sievert.

Although the term was used as early as 1945, the rem made its first appearance in the scientific literature in 1950 in a paper by Herbert Parker. In this paper, Parker explained what the rem and another unit of his, the rep (predecessor of the rad), stood for: "The rep is an abbreviation of roentgen equivalent physical. The rem is an abbreviation of roentgen equivalent man or mammal. The more obvious choice of reb (roentgen equivalent biological) is avoided because of the confusion in speech between rep and reb."

Ron Kathren (1986) explains Parker's comment regarding a "confusion in speech" as follows: "The unit [the rem] was originally called the reb (roentgen equivalent biological), but during one of his early presentations of the new unit, Parker was suffering from a cold, which led to difficulty in differentiating it from the rep. Accordingly, the name of the unit was changed to rem."

Scram
Scram refers to the sudden shutdown of a reactor, usually by the insertion of control rods into the core. Also referred to as a trip.

The term appears to have been coined by Volney Wilson at the University of Chicago during WWII. Wilson was in charge of the instrumentation at Chicago Pile One (CP-1) when Enrico Fermi and his coworkers achieved the first controlled self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction. In particular, Wilson oversaw the construction of the pile's control rods.

Leona Marshall Libby, the only woman present at CP-1's initial criticality, had the following to say about the use of the term scram: "The safety rods were coated with cadmium foil, and this metal absorbed so many neutrons that the chain reaction was stopped. Volney Wilson called these ‘scram' rods. He said that the pile had ‘scrammed,' the rods had ‘scrammed' into the pile" (1979).

Scram is often said to be an acronym for "safety control rod axe man." A common variant, "safety control reactor axe man," is far less plausible because the word "reactor" was not in use at the time that the word scram was coined. The "axe man" being referred to is Norman Hilberry who stood by with an axe ready to cut a rope tied to the railing of the balcony overlooking the pile. At the other end of the rope was an emergency control rod. If the chain reaction got out of control, Hilberry was supposed to shut it down by cutting the rope and allowing the control rod to fall by gravity into the pile.

A problem with this explanation is that the word scram was applied to the process of shutting down the reactor or to the control rods; there is no record that scram was ever used to refer to Hilberry. Almost certainly, the "safety control rod axe man" story was developed as a humorous way to explain the origin of a newly invented word that lacked any other convenient explanation.

Carl Gamertsfelder, a health physicist who was present at the initial criticality, recalled that they joked that scram was what you did if there was a problem with the pile (personal communication with Ron Kathren).

X Rays
In the following sentence from his paper Ueber eine neue Art von Strahlung [On a New Kind of Ray] (28 December 1895), Röntgen used the term x rays for the first time in print:

"A piece of sheet aluminum, 15 mm thick, still allowed the X rays (as I will now call the rays, for the sake of brevity) to pass. . . . I find the justification for using the name ‘rays' for the agent emanating from the wall of the discharge apparatus in the very regular formation of shadows that are produced if one brings more or less transparent materials between the apparatus and the fluorescent screen (or the photographic plate)."

Brevity is the operative word in Röntgen's explanation for his choice of the term. Unlike some of his contemporaries (e.g., William Crookes), Röntgen was not one for flowery language. Designating the rays with a single letter was more his style.

Certainly Röntgen needed to select a name to distinguish these new rays from the other rays associated with gas discharge tubes (e.g., cathode rays and Lenard rays), but why did he choose the letter X? Why not call them Y rays or Z rays? The most common explanation is that Röntgen chose the term X rays to indicate that these rays were of an unknown nature. Although I know of nothing he wrote to suggest this, it makes sense—the letter x is used in mathematics to identify the principal unknown quantity.

 


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