4.1 Article

Radioactive impact in South Korea from the damaged nuclear reactors in Fukushima: evidence of long and short range transport

Journal

JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 397-411

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0952-4746/32/4/397

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Korea Ocean Research and Development Institute [PE98564, PE98690]
  2. Spanish Department of Science and Technology [CTM2009-14321-C02-01]
  3. Government of Andalusia [RNM-6300]

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Traces of long-lived fallout-derived radioisotopes (Cs-134 and Cs-137) were found in wet and dry deposition samples collected from the west and east coasts of South Korea from March to May 2011 following the release of radionuclides from the damaged nuclear power plants in Fukushima, Japan. The analysis of air mass back trajectory and atmospheric pressure systems indicated that the Fukushima-derived radiocaesium had predominantly reached South Korea from the west by surface westerlies from 11 March to 5 April; however, after 6 April, air masses arrived from Japan directly due to a high pressure system that developed to the east of Japan. Spatial variation of deposition fluxes of radiocaesium in South Korea was partly attributed to the presence of local longitudinal orography.

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