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For the first, found archived as
saved link, the one-time dose was "A radiation of 90 mSv ..." which is on the safe side. The worker limits of 15 mSv or 20 mSv are for daily exposure. The cited values of 2000 mSv to 5000 mSv at which a person may suffer from nausea and vomiting or in extreme cases suffer from acute radiation syndrome, are ten to fifty time higher.
About the second, found at
updated link, in general tritium exposure is not of concern. Opinion stated of "prominent nuclear physicist Dr. Surendra Gadekar said there is no “safe does” of Tritium" is based on the, scientifically unproved,
Linear no-threshold model, refuted by reputable research that states that under specified levels, exposure not only does no harm, but may be beneficial (the LNT model ignores existing DNA repair mechanisms and is not supported by biological evidence and deprecated by international bodies specializing in radiation protection). --
Robertiki (
talk)
16:07, 29 October 2021 (UTC)reply