Swiss federal authorities

Radiation Protection

Radiation protection serves to protect personnel, the population and the surroundings of nuclear installations against ionising radiation.

ENSI deals with occupational radiological protection, dosimetry, radiation measurement systems, radioactive emissions and environmental monitoring, as well as with the radiological impact of accidents.

Background Articles

  • Background articles, Posts

    Radiation Biology (5/5): Current research in radiation biology

    Although many insights have been gained through radiation biology research, many ambiguities still remain. Nevertheless, ENSI, in cooperation with other international organisations, is working towards closing these knowledge gaps.

  • Background articles, Posts

    Radiation Biology (4/5): How ionising radiation is measured

    Ionising radiation can cause sicknesses. In order to protect the population and personnel working in nuclear installations from these harmful effects, it must be possible to measure radiation doses at any time and as accurately as possible.

  • Background articles, Posts

    Radiation Biology (3/5): Low doses and their damage potential

    There is no question in radiation biology that the severity of sickness increases at high doses. Nevertheless, it is important when considering everyday radiation protection to be able to estimate the risk of a mutation of the genetic material, and thus the risk of cancer, even in the low dose range.

  • Background articles, Posts

    Radiation Biology (2/5): Sickness after high doses

    With high doses, the severity of the radiation effect increases beyond that of a threshold dose. While the chances of survival up to a certain radiation exposure remain intact, very high doses, such as those measured on the Chernobyl site after the reactor accident, will lead to death within a very short time period.

  • Background articles, Posts

    Radiation Biology (1/5): On the Trail of Ionising Radiation

    The discovery of X-rays triggered an explosion of interest. The euphoria was, however, tempered as more and more information became known about the side effects. Radiation biology examines how radiation acts on cells and tissues.

  • Background articles, Posts

    Series of articles on barriers 6/6: The containment holds radioactive substances in the reactor building

    The reactor pressure vessel is enclosed by the containment as the third barrier. This consists of a steel primary containment and a concrete secondary containment.

  • Background articles, Posts

    Series of articles on barriers 5/6: The water circuit (primary circuit part 2 of 2)

    With its pipelines, shut-off valves and other components, the cooling circuit, together with the reactor pressure vessel, is the second barrier for trapping radioactive substances.

  • Background articles, Posts

    Series of articles on barriers 4/6: The reactor pressure vessel (primary circuit part 1 of 2)

    The reactor pressure vessel, together with the water’s cooling circuit, is the second barrier for trapping radioactive substances.

  • Background articles, Posts

    Series of articles on barriers 3/6: The fuel rod cladding tubes (fuel assemblies part 2 of 2)

    The fuel pellets are filled into metal tubes. Together with the nuclear fuel matrix, the cladding tubes are the first barrier for trapping radioactive substances in nuclear power plants.