
The EPA has stopped providing the charts on this page. The link above has been reprogrammed to pull every major US city that the EPA RADNET is monitoring and displays the thumbnails for all of those graphs on a single page. Again, as with this page the thumbnails are click-able and pull up a details page with larger beta and gamma radiation graphs on the same page.
The new details page also has a US Radiation Map that allows you to jump directly to any other US city where the EPA has set up a fixed RADNET monitor instead of having to click through each city one by one.
The new page is located at: http://blog.alexanderhiggins.com/2011/04/12/real-time-epa-radnet-japan-nuclear-radiation-monitoring-every-us-city-single-page-16511/
Enjoy!
With the current news that nuclear fallout radiation from Japan has hit the US the US Government has put real time radiation monitoring data online.
Per the usual, just like with the BP spill when the Government puts information online they bury it so deep it’s very hard to find. Then once you do find what you are looking for it takes a month worth of Sundays to get through it all.
So I made an application that generates thumbnails of all of the real time Japan nuclear radiation monitoring data for the major US west coast cities every three hours 15 minutes and posts them right here. (After watching Fairbanks Gamma Graph from jump from 1,000 CPM to over 30,000 CPM in just minutes my initial assumption that these graphs were slow moving and discernible differences would take hours was proven incorrect. I now see the graphs and thumbnails will show spikes much faster than I anticipated).
This will allow you to quickly check the status of all active EPA radioactive fallout monitors at once on this single page. As more monitors come online I will update the app to include data from those monitors.
Update: Looks like this is up just in time as independent radiation monitoring has just gone offline. Keep in mind though this is Government supplied/censored data.
You can click on the individual thumbnails to view the update to the minute graph for the city and radiation type as labeled on the thumbnails.
(THESE ARE GOVERNMENT EXPLANATIONS NOT MINE)
EPA designed this site to summarize findings and assist in interpresting the data on the CDX website.
EPA continuously monitors environmental trends in radiation and has been doing so for 50 years. EPA has permanent or “fixed” monitoring stations throughout the nation that form the RadNet System.
This page provides the radiation air monitoring data from the West Coast fixed monitors, which would be the first to detect radioactivity associated with a potential release from Japan’s Fukushima nuclear reactors. As the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has said, we do not expect to see radiation at harmful levels reaching the U.S. from the damaged Japanese nuclear power plants. EPA recognizes that RadNet provides complex data. The data can be difficult to understand at first glance, but, in its simplest form, the data shows radiation trends over time. Tracking trends allows us see changes to radiation in the United States. EPA will continue to work with its world-class scientists to make this data understandable and relevant to citizens.
To make the monitoring results easier to visualize and follow over time, we have developed charts from the RadNet fixed air monitoring data. We have included two sets of data;”beta gross count rate” and “gamma gross count rate ranges.” Tracking beta and gamma radiation, which are particles and rays that come from radioacitve material, helps us to identify the type and amount of the radioactive material in the air.
Occasionally, you may see brief gaps in the data. Scientists remove any data points from the database that are caused by instrument error.
Larger gaps generally mean the RadNet monitor was temporarily taken offline for maintenance or repair. In response to the Japan incident, we have prioritized maintenance to the west coast monitors. Having a monitor offline is not cause for concern. Even if the closest monitor is not operating, the RadNet system as a whole continues to provide a national view of airborne radiation in the environment.
Spikes in data can be caused by a variety of situations, including fluctuations in naturally occuring radiation levels like from radon, rain concentrating natural radiation, and changes in atmospheric (barometric) pressure.
Occasionally, you may see brief gaps in the data. Scientists remove any data points from the database that are caused by instrument error.
Larger gaps generally mean the RadNet monitor was temporarily taken offline for maintenance or repair. In response to the Japan incident, we have prioritized maintenance to the west coast monitors. Having a monitor offline is not cause for concern. Even if the closest monitor is not operating, the RadNet system as a whole continues to provide a national view of airborne radiation in the environment.
Spikes in data can be caused by a variety of situations, including fluctuations in naturally occuring radiation levels like from radon, rain concentrating natural radiation, and changes in atmospheric (barometric) pressure.
RadNet fixed (permanent) air monitors sample continuously at a nominal flow rate of 60 cubic meters per hour (Adults typically breathe at a rate of about 20 cubic meters per day.) The monitors collect any particles in the sample on a filter. Radiation detectors continuously measure the beta and gamma radioactivity from particles on the filter. Every hour, the fixed monitor sends an electronic report to EPA’s National Air and Radiation Environmental Laboratory.
RadNet fixed (permanent) air monitors sample continuously at a nominal flow rate of 60 cubic meters per hour (Adults typically breathe at a rate of about 20 cubic meters per day.) The monitors collect any particles in the sample on a filter. Radiation detectors continuously measure the beta and gamma radioactivity from particles on the filter. Every hour, the fixed monitor sends an electronic report to EPA’s National Air and Radiation Environmental Laboratory.
RadNet fixed (permanent) air monitors sample continuously at a nominal flow rate of 60 cubic meters per hour (Adults typically breathe at a rate of about 20 cubic meters per day.) The monitors collect any particles in the sample on a filter. Radiation detectors continuously measure the beta and gamma radioactivity from particles on the filter. Every hour, the fixed monitor sends an electronic report to EPA’s National Air and Radiation Environmental Laboratory.