It happened halfway around the world, but Japan’s nuclear crisis could be raising radiation levels at UNC.
But students and researchers who found low levels of radiation in the air above Phillips Hall stressed there is no need for alarm.
A group from the physics and astronomy department detected the radiation March 19. Members of the team believe it might have drifted to the University from a damaged nuclear reactor in Japan.
In order to detect the radiation, researchers had to create extremely specialized equipment that could screen specifically for radioactive isotopes like Iodine-131 and Iodine-132 that a reactor would emit into the atmosphere.
“Natural radiation is in everything,” said Reyco Henning, one of the professors supervising the research team. “It has absolutely no medical implications whatsoever.
“You need very specialized equipment to detect the radiation. It would normally be lost in a sea of radioactivity.”
Henning and his colleagues are collaborating with researchers at universities across the nation to chart the way radiation from Japan is moving across the United States.
Members of the team hope to eventually publish a paper with their findings.
“People in Japan will definitely have long-term problems that they will have to deal with and the people on-site will be sick,” Henning said.