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Measuring Radiation from the Sky
−A Decade of Ambient Dose Equivalent Rates Observations Around TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station−
Fig. 1 Temporal changes in ambient dose equivalent rates around the FDNPS (2011–2022)
Radiation levels, which were high immediately after the accident at the FDNPS, have substantially
decreased over time due to decontamination efforts and natural radioactive decay.
Tabel 1 Temporal changes in area distribution based on radiation levels (2011–2022)
of the monitored area exhibited radiation levels exceeding 0.2 µSv/h; however, by 2022, this proportion had
decreased to about 23 %, with most of the area recording radiation levels below this threshold.
As illustrated in Fig. 1 and Table 1, immediately after the accident, approximately 95 % of the area within an 80 km radius of the FDNPS exhibited ambient dose equivalent rates exceeding 0.2 µSv/h (approximately equivalent to the annual exposure dose limit of 1.0 mSv for the public). However, radiation levels have decreased over time, and by 2022, this proportion had dropped to about 23 %. Aerial monitoring has enabled quantitative assessment of these changes, providing clear evidence of radiation level trends and offering scientific data to support the recovery of affected regions and public safety. These monitoring results are publicly available through the website of the Nuclear Regulation Authority*.
ARM is expected to serve as a valuable emergency response tool during accidents at other nuclear facilities. With its capability to conduct rapid and wide-area assessments independent of ground infrastructure conditions, the data collected via ARM will continue to play a vital role in identifying affected areas and supporting effective measures to enhance public safety.
*Airborne monitoring (Archives of Monitoring Results>Reading of Land Monitoring)https://radioactivity.nra.go.jp/en/results/land/airborne
Acknowledgements
This study was a part of the result contracted research "Aircraft Monitoring Inside and Outside 80 km Radius Around TEPCO's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station" entrusted by the Nuclear Regulation Authority of Japan in the fiscal year 2022.
Author (Researcher) Information
![]() | Name | Akira Futemma |
---|---|
Aerial Monitoring Group, Nuclear Emergency Assistance and Training Center, Nuclear Safety and Emergency Preparedness Institute |
Reference
Paper URL: JAEA-Technology-2023-027.pdf (in Japanese)
March 31, 2025
Research and Development Related to the Accident at TEPCO's Fukushima Daiichi NPS [R&D for environmental restoration]