Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster Fallout

Interactive Radiation Contamination Map

Radionuclide Type

Time Period

1986

Display Options

Contamination Levels (kBq/m²)

>1,000 (Heavily contaminated)
200-600
40-200
10-40
2-10
<2 (Background levels)

Region Information

Units & Info
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Understanding Radiation Units

Becquerel (Bq): Measures radioactivity - one decay per second. The map shows kilobecquerels per square meter (kBq/m²), indicating contamination density.

Sievert (Sv): Measures biological effects of radiation. Often shown in millisieverts (mSv) - 1/1000th of a sievert.

Gray (Gy): Measures absorbed radiation dose - 1 joule of energy per kilogram of matter.

Contamination and Health Impacts

Areas with different contamination levels have different potential health impacts:

Greater than 1,000 kBq/m² (Red): Mandatory evacuation zones. Could give additional dose of ~10 mSv/year initially.

555 kBq/m² (Orange): One criterion for mandatory resettlement in 1986. Additional dose of about 5 mSv/year initially.

37 kBq/m² (Yellow): Areas of strict radiation control. Comparable to an additional ~0.5 mSv/year.

Less than 10 kBq/m² (Green/Blue): Low contamination level. Additional radiation close to normal background variations.

Decay Over Time

Cesium-137 has a half-life of ~30 years, meaning contamination levels today are about half what they were in 1986.

Iodine-131 has a half-life of 8 days, so it was a concern only in the immediate aftermath.

Strontium-90 has a half-life of ~29 years and tends to concentrate in bones and teeth.

Source: Data compiled from OECD Nuclear Energy Agency, World Health Organization, and International Atomic Energy Agency reports.

Chernobyl's Impact on Ukraine, Belarus, and Beyond Chernobyl Tank Assault Chernobyl's Impact on Ukraine, Belarus, and Beyond Fukushima: Ten Years Later Chernobyl Today: Who Still Lives There? Chernobyl vs. Fukushima: A Comparison of Two Nuclear Disasters How Radiation Affects the Human Body: Lessons from Chernobyl How Reactor No. 4 Exploded Mutations and Wildlife: How Nature is Reclaiming Chernobyl The Fallout of Truth: Soviet Cover-Ups and the Global Reaction The Liquidators: Unsung Heroes of Chernobyl The Night of the Disaster: A Timeline of Events