Shukie said:
The way I see it, every single ionizing particle that passes through a cell has a chance of damaging it. The cell-repair mechanism is imperfect, so even a single particle can damage a cell beyond repair, causing cancer. It's not as if at low radiation doses the particles won't have enough energy to penetrate a cell or something right? So no matter how low the dose, there will always be a risk.
Shukie,
You could make exactly that same argument for your immune system. The immune system is imperfect, and each germ or pathogen has a chance at making you sick. Therefore, you need to avoid germs and pathogens at all cost...
That's also one of the arguments that people used to make to justify avoiding casual contact with people who are HIV positive.
The fact is that, as has been pointed out, we EVOLVED in a field of radiation. The people
who live in Denver get more radiation from the sky because they have less air shielding them.
So, I guess in your way of "thinking"; you should also avoid Denver at all costs..
Your attitude toward radiation is similar to the attitude that a person with OCD -
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder - has with germs. [ Remember Howard Hughes? ]
We now recognize such preoccupations as a mental illness.
Scientists have also shown that exposure to radiation can have a beneficial effect - just
like having an exposure to a germ in a vaccine helps to prepare the immune system and
makes it stronger.
From scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory:
https://www.llnl.gov/str/JulAug03/Wyrobek.html
"The team also discovered that the human lymphoblastoid cells exhibit what is called an adaptive response to ionizing radiation. An extremely low dose (also called a priming dose) appears to offer protection to the cell from a subsequent high dose (2 grays) of ionizing radiation. The degree of protection was measured by the amount of reduced chromosomal damage. A priming dose of 0.05 gray, administered about 6 hours before the high dose, can reduce chromosomal damage by 20 to 50 percent, compared with damage to cells that were not exposed to the priming dose."
The field of radiation damage is more complex than your analysis indicates.
Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist