Why we should have scanners in airports If someone asks another person what would be a reason to avoid airport scanners her answer would most likely reply with something having to do with radiation. This should not be a major concern because “Millimeter wave energy is much lower than that of X-rays, so it poses fewer health concerns” (Hamalainen). Getting a scan is practically equivalent “…to 3to9 of the radiation received through normal daily living” (Martin). “Natural background radiation exposes us to about 2.4 millisieverts of radiation annually, which is about 24,000 times the high end estimate of 0.1 microsievert of radiation from a backscatter airport scanner” (“Are…”). If someone is concerned about radiation then flying is a bullet compared to the pinch of a scan because “Flying at 30,000 feet exposes you to X-rays from the sun anyhow, so the amount of X-rays beamed at you during the scan is the same as tacking a few extra minutes onto a flight from New York to Las Angeles”
Why we should have scanners in airports If someone asks another person what would be a reason to avoid airport scanners her answer would most likely reply with something having to do with radiation. This should not be a major concern because “Millimeter wave energy is much lower than that of X-rays, so it poses fewer health concerns” (Hamalainen). Getting a scan is practically equivalent “…to 3to9 of the radiation received through normal daily living” (Martin). “Natural background radiation exposes us to about 2.4 millisieverts of radiation annually, which is about 24,000 times the high end estimate of 0.1 microsievert of radiation from a backscatter airport scanner” (“Are…”). If someone is concerned about radiation then flying is a bullet compared to the pinch of a scan because “Flying at 30,000 feet exposes you to X-rays from the sun anyhow, so the amount of X-rays beamed at you during the scan is the same as tacking a few extra minutes onto a flight from New York to Las Angeles”