Many things in the environment (including potassium) have radioactive isotopes that contribute to background radiation. There is no need to worry about this radiation.
2007-05-29 13:04:38
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answer #1
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answered by Mr. G 6
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If no one has ever died from natural potassium radiation especially from eating a banana,then you have nothing to worry about. Many elements including potassium have radioactive isotopes but these are in minute amounts that would never add up to a harmful dose under normal conditions.
2007-05-29 13:13:21
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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The extent of how it is asked is not like you think, as when you consume food. NOTHING TO WORRY ABOUT.
Its ok to consume its just a source that reacts to radiation so to speak.
In certain degrees of consideration, potassium and carbon, have radioactive isotopes.
(read under)
Radiation inside the human body and
Terrestrial sources
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Background_radiation
Here's info on the element
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potassium
Amongst the idea of exposure to radiation
they mix what they call potassium iodide.
In which saturates it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potassium_iodide
So some have worked on some type of protection agent, maybe a pill or cream or something for someone who may or may have come to the exposure.
http://www.ki4u.com/potassium_iodide.htm
2007-05-29 13:29:29
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answer #3
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answered by stalemind 2
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potassium iodide
is a medicine used in the treatment of radiation.
From wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potassium_iodide
Potassium iodide may also be used to protect the thyroid from radioactive iodine in the event of an accident or attack at a nuclear power plant, or other nuclear attack, especially where a nuclear reactor is breached and the volatile radionuclides, which contain significant amount of 131I, are released into the environment. Radioiodine is a particularly dangerous radionuclide because the body concentrates it in the thyroid gland. Potassium iodide cannot protect against other causes of radiation poisoning, however, nor can it provide any degree of protection against a dirty bomb unless the bomb happens to contain a significant amount of radioactive iodine. In case of a nuclear emergency,
Some more stuff. From:http://www.ki4u.com/free_book/s60p778.htm
Prophylactic use of potassium iodide in peacetime nuclear accidents.
When the Three Mile Island nuclear reactor accident was worsening and it appeared that the reactor's containment structure might rupture and release dangerous amounts of radioactive iodines and other radioactive material into the atmosphere, the Government rushed preparation of small bottles of a saturated solution of potassium iodide. The reactor's containment structure did not rupture.
The 237,013 bottles of saturated KI solution that were delivered to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania-mostly too late to have been effective if the Three Mile Island accident had become an uncontained meltdown -were stored in secret in a warehouse, and were never used.
Since this famous 1979 accident, that injured no one, the Governors of the 50 states have been given the responsibility for protecting Americans against radioiodines by providing prophylactic potassium iodide. By May of 1986, only in Tennessee have Americans, other than some specialists, been given potassium iodide tablets; around one nuclear reactor some 7,500 residents have been given the officially approved KI tablets, to assure their having this protection if a nuclear accident occurs.
In April of 1982 the Bureau of Radiological Health and Bureau of Drugs, Food and Drug Administration, Department of Health and Human Services released "FINAL RECOMMENDATIONS, Potassium Iodide As A Thyroid- Blocking Agent In A Radiation Emergency: Recommendations On Use". These lengthy recommendations are summarized in the FDA's "mandated patient product insert". (See a complete copy in the following section.) This insert is packed with every bottle of non-prescription KI tablets sold. However, the lengthy FDA recommendations contain many facts not mentioned in this required insert, including the following: "Based on the FDA adverse reaction reports and an estimated 48 x 106 [48 million] 300-mg doses of potassium iodide administered each year [in the United States], the NCRP [National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements] estimated an adverse reaction rate of from 1 in a million to 1 in 10 million doses." (Note that this extremely low adverse reaction rate is for doses over twice as large as the 130-mg prophylactic dose.)
2007-05-29 13:23:20
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answer #4
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answered by V. 3
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Potassium has a naturally occurring radiosiotope that is part of the natural background radiation dose you receive everyday. This background radiation also comes from other radiosiotopes and the decay of uranium and thorium. Two thirds of the dose a person receives is from these terrestrial sources - most of it from radon gas. The other third comes from cosmic rays from space. Total radiation from background sources is around 1.5 milliSieverts per year. A chest x-ray or several hours airplane flight will increase your dose by about 0.04 mSv.
2007-05-29 13:27:11
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answer #5
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answered by a_jolly_swagman 2
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In Physics, Radiation is defined as :
a. the process in which energy is emitted as particles or waves.
b. the complete process in which energy is emitted by one body, transmitted through an intervening medium or space, and absorbed by another body.
c. the energy transferred by these processes.
I think the answer to your question is no, eating a banana will not give you slight amounts of radiation.
Potassium is an electrolyte found naturally in our body and outside and works totally in a different biochemical process in producing energy and in affecting our lives.
2007-05-29 13:15:25
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answer #6
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answered by oki doki 2
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You would get more harmful radiation from stepping outside in the sunshine or wearing an old analog watch with the glow-in-the-dark tips on the minute and hour hands.
2007-05-29 13:06:34
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answer #7
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answered by tabulator32 6
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human beings receiving chemotherapy do no longer provide off any further radiation than healthful human beings. Why might desire to they? Chemotherapy has no longer something to do with radiation. Chemotherapy is using chemical components to kill maximum cancers cells by chemical reactions. consistent with hazard you meant "Radiation therapy"? if so, the sufferers soak up extreme power radiation, no longer emit radiation. there's a distinction. as quickly as radiation is absorbed, it only turns to warmth. be conscious, human bodies are constantly emitting radiation. that's why you will discover them using infrared night imaginative and prescient goggles. you probable meant "risky radiation", as in "extreme-power ionizing radiation". if so, human bodies are nevertheless constantly emitting risky radiation and it truly is totally organic. it truly is referred to as history radiation. yet those levels are so low that they do no longer reason maximum cancers. human beings receiving chemotherapy and radiation therapy do no longer emit extra ionizing radiation than healthful human beings.
2016-10-09 02:27:09
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answer #8
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answered by ? 4
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yes your are correct :D
nah on a serious note, it has no effect at all, it can only go radioactive enough to harm you if they strapped uranium around it. whoever said that was either tipsy or thinking of something else he heard about
2007-05-29 13:06:11
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Well, if that's the case don't eat banana's, potatoes, rice. Matter of fact, just to be safe, STOP eating anything.......that way the radiation that's already eaten your brain, will diminish...........slightly, hehehehe.... sorry people, I just couldn't resist......
2007-05-29 13:13:06
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answer #10
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answered by graciouswolfe 5
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