WesPeros t1_jckv5kr wrote
UV light from Sun does damage many things, but keep in mind, most of the Sun's UV light gets blocked by the Earth's ozone, only small fraction reaches the surface. Human made radiation is much more intense than the one received by the Sun
CarneDelGato t1_jcmefde wrote
> Human made radiation is much more intense than [the radiation from] the sun
I assume you mean for the sake of using it as disinfectant. I was in San Juan this week and I’m reasonably sure my sun burns are not from human-sourced radiation.
Inevitable-Teacher0 t1_jcmf6df wrote
Sure, but if you were to be exposed to human made radiation, your burns would be a lot worse.
[deleted] t1_jcmfhbu wrote
[removed]
Fskn t1_jcmfee3 wrote
For the sake of anything
U.V from the sun is inherently filtered out to a very large degree by the atmosphere, you cant get around that on the ground.
U.V we generate with whatever technology is only subjected to what we decide it to be.
CarneDelGato t1_jcmg9sm wrote
Okay, sure, but we generate a heck of a lot more radiation that isn’t actually harmful. You won’t get burned by a wireless router.
belhambone t1_jcmmh9t wrote
Yes, but if you stand inside a hospital air handling unit with UVC sterilization lamps with exposed skin you'll have severe burns in a few minutes.
Atharen_McDohl t1_jcn2f04 wrote
Right but this is specifically about the radiation we create specifically for sterilization. We're not talking about all human made radiation, just the kind we use for disinfecting.
stfsu t1_jcmudmf wrote
Gotta check that UV index, it’s a nice sunny day out here in Southern California with a peak of 7, while San Juan Puerto Rico hits 10 tomorrow
CarneDelGato t1_jcn1586 wrote
Yeah, I’m a pasty boy and reapplied like every hour or so with SPF 50, still got burned. Ain’t nothing for it :(
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