B11K-04
Modelling evolution of air dose rates in river basins in Fukushima Prefecture affected by sediment-sorbed radiocesium redistribution

Monday, 14 December 2015: 08:45
2006 (Moscone West)
Alex Malins1, Kazuyuki Sakuma2, Takahiro Nakanishi3, Hiroshi Kurikami3,4, Masahiko Machida1 and Akihiro Kitamura3,5, (1)JAEA Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Center for Computational Science & e-Systems, Kashiwa, Japan, (2)JAEA Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Fukushima Environmental Safety Center, Toki, Japan, (3)JAEA Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Fukushima Environmental Safety Center, Fukushima, Japan, (4)Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Naka-Gun, Tokai-Mura, Japan, (5)JAEA Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Toki, Japan
Abstract:
The radioactive 134Cs and 137Cs isotopes deposited over Fukushima Prefecture by the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster are the predominant radiological concern for the years following the accident. This is because the energetic gamma radiation they emit on decay constitutes the majority of the elevated air dose rates that now afflict the region. Therefore, we developed a tool for calculating air dose rates from arbitrary radiocesium spatial distributions across the land surface and depth profiles within the ground. As cesium is strongly absorbed by clay soils, its primary redistribution mechanism within Fukushima Prefecture is by soil erosion and water-borne sediment transport. Each year between 0.1~1% of the total radiocesium inventory in the river basins neighboring Fukushima Daiichi is eroded from the land surface and enters into water courses, predominantly during typhoon storms. Although this is a small amount in relative terms, in absolute terms it corresponds to terabecquerels of 134Cs and 137Cs redistribution each year and this can affect the air dose rate at locations of high erosion and sediment deposition. This study inputs the results of sediment redistribution simulations into the dose rate evaluation tool to calculate the locations and magnitude of air dose rate changes due to radiocesium redistribution. The dose rate calculations are supported by handheld survey instrument results taken within the Prefecture.