[ RadSafe ] Adopting the International System of Units for Radiation Measurements in the United States: Proceedings of a Workshop
Jason Meade
meadeja at vcu.edu
Fri Mar 3 07:51:45 CST 2017
It was a great workshop and well worth my time, but after it was done, I'm
pretty sure it will be done again with almost an identical agenda in 10
years time.
Entirely too much "but this is the way we've always done it" and "it would
be too hard" type talking among those who've always been doing the work and
who are largely in charge for any type of shift in thinking, despite the
fact that the majority of the scientific and academic portions of our
education system have already made the change.
On Thu, Mar 2, 2017 at 11:38 AM, Cary Renquist <cary.renquist at ezag.com>
wrote:
> From the National Academies Press.
> One can always download the PDF version for free (might require an account)
>
> Adopting the International System of Units for Radiation Measurements in
> the United States: Proceedings of a Workshop
>
> Most countries in the world use the SI (Système International, also known
> as the metric system) units for radiation measurements in commercial and
> technical activities. The United States, in contrast, uses a mix of SI and
> conventional units for radiation measurements, despite 30-year-old national
> and international recommendations to exclusively use SI. Radiation
> professionals in the United States are faced with the need to understand
> both systems and make conversions between the two.
> Short link
> http://bit.ly/2mPP5bQ
>
> Adopting the International System of Units for Radiation Measurements in
> the United States: Proceedings of a Workshop | The National Academies Press
> <https://www.nap.edu/catalog/24645/adopting-the-
> international-system-of-units-for-radiation-measurements-in-
> the-united-states?utm_source=NASEM+News+and+Publications&
> utm_campaign=b2788914c1-Final_Book_2017_03_02_24645&utm_
> medium=email&utm_term=0_96101de015-b2788914c1-102196093&goal=0_96101de015-
> b2788914c1-102196093&mc_cid=b2788914c1&mc_eid=3ee8f719d6>
>
>
> ---
> Cary Renquist
> cary.renquist at ezag.com
>
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--
Thanks,
Jason A Meade, AS, BS, MHSA, RRPT, RT(T)
Senior Radiation Safety Specialist
Virginia Commonwealth University
Sanger Hall, B2-016
1101 East Marshall St
PO Box 980112
Richmond, VA 23298-0112
meadeja at vcu.edu
804-828-0594 office
330-347-0271 cell
"A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they
shall never sit in."
-Old Greek proverb
"You call this bad? I'll tell you what bad is....Bad is passing test depth
at 80 feet per second with a thirty degree down bubble. Compared to that,
this is a walk in the park."
-Carlo Ciliberti
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