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Overview"Antone Brooks grew up close enough to Nevada Test Site nuclear detonations to see the sky light up, feel the shockwaves, and be exposed to radioactive fallout. His long scientific career--from early days trekking into the Uinta Mountains to hunt contaminated deer for tissue samples, to thousands of hours devoted to careful microscope work on chromosomal aberrations in animal studies--has been an increasingly sophisticated search for answers to questions these fallout exposures raised. How dangerous were they? Could they produce cancer? How afraid of low dose radiation should people be?Dr. Brooks served as Chief Scientist for the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) new Low Dose Radiation Research Program from 1999 to 2008. During that decade, the group redefined the field. Researchers applied advances in instrumentation and molecular biology from the Human Genome Project and developed new technologies, like the microbeam, to examine cellular response to low dose radiation. The findings were startling. At low doses, biological reactions are unique and often unrelated to those that occur at high doses. The hugely influential linear-no-threshold model--which predicted that damage from acute exposures can be extrapolated linearly to low dose exposures--was flawed. In fact, small doses of radiation can have an adaptive protective effect. ""Hit theory,"" the idea that radiation only affected cells it directly traversed, yielded to a new ""bystander theory,"" which hypothesizes that cells communicate with each other and a dose to one cell affects others surrounding it. Low Dose Radiation tells the story of the DOE program's development, the scientists who made it viable, and the fundamental results, highlighting lessons learned--including how that knowledge might be useful in a nuclear event. It describes the impact on current thinking, summarizing the data and providing a scientific basis for setting radiation standards." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Antone L. Brooks , Gayle WoloschakPublisher: Washington State University Press Imprint: Washington State University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.499kg ISBN: 9780874223545ISBN 10: 0874223547 Pages: 324 Publication Date: 11 April 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"""[Dr. Brooks] provides a basic understanding of our bodies' unique responses to low doses of radiation delivered at low dose rates . . . critical to helping decrease unnecessary public fear, thereby allowing the incredible contributions of nuclear technology to be beneficially harnessed for energy, medicine, agriculture, industry, and more."" --Dr. Alan E. Waltar, Retired Professor and Head, Department of Nuclear Engineering, Texas A&M ""One cannot think of a more suitable individual to narrate, comment and critique the field . . . Unique and long overdue, this book will be well-received by a very wide audience of experts in the field, by scientists involved in basic research, clinicians, atomic radiation workers, regulators, funding administrators, and the public at large."" --Dr. Edouard I. Azzam, Professor, Rutgers Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and New Jersey Medical School, and faculty member, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation ""Well written, easy to follow . . . The author's enthusiasm for the topic is obvious throughout the manuscript . . . an excellent resource for scientists, nonscientists, and students who are interested in radiation."" --Dr. Kanokporn Noy Rithidech, Professor of Research Pathology, Stony Brook University" [Dr. Brooks] provides a basic understanding of our bodies' unique responses to low doses of radiation delivered at low dose rates . . . critical to helping decrease unnecessary public fear, thereby allowing the incredible contributions of nuclear technology to be beneficially harnessed for energy, medicine, agriculture, industry, and more. --Dr. Alan E. Waltar, Retired Professor and Head, Department of Nuclear Engineering, Texas A&M One cannot think of a more suitable individual to narrate, comment and critique the field . . . Unique and long overdue, this book will be well-received by a very wide audience of experts in the field, by scientists involved in basic research, clinicians, atomic radiation workers, regulators, funding administrators, and the public at large. --Dr. Edouard I. Azzam, Professor, Rutgers Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and New Jersey Medical School, and faculty member, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Well written, easy to follow . . . The author's enthusiasm for the topic is obvious throughout the manuscript . . . an excellent resource for scientists, nonscientists, and students who are interested in radiation. --Dr. Kanokporn Noy Rithidech, Professor of Research Pathology, Stony Brook University Author InformationAntone L. Brooks, Research Professor Emeritus at Washington State University Tri-Cities, holds a Master of Radiation Ecology and a Ph.D. in Physical Biology. He has contributed to more than 150 professional papers. 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