Curie to Kilobecquerel
Ci
kBq
Conversion History
| Conversion | Reuse | Delete |
|---|---|---|
1 Ci (Curie) → 37000000.000000037 kBq (Kilobecquerel) Just now |
Quick Reference Table (Curie to Kilobecquerel)
| Curie (Ci) | Kilobecquerel (kBq) |
|---|---|
| 0.001 | 37,000.000000000037 |
| 0.01 | 370,000.00000000037 |
| 0.1 | 3,700,000.0000000037 |
| 1 | 37,000,000.000000037 |
| 10 | 370,000,000.00000037 |
| 100 | 3,700,000,000.0000037 |
| 1,000 | 37,000,000,000.00003700000000000004 |
About Curie (Ci)
The curie (Ci) equals 3.7 × 10¹⁰ disintegrations per second — the activity of one gram of radium-226. It was the dominant unit of radioactivity for most of the 20th century, before the becquerel was adopted by SI in 1975. The curie remains in widespread use in the United States, particularly in nuclear medicine, radiation safety licensing, and the nuclear power industry. A typical nuclear power reactor fuel assembly has an initial activity of thousands of curies per kilogram; spent fuel cooling pools contain millions of curies of fission products. Radioactive material transport regulations specify curie thresholds for package categories. One curie is approximately 27 GBq, making it a large unit compared to everyday sources.
One gram of Ra-226 has exactly 1 Ci of activity. A Co-60 teletherapy head used for cancer treatment historically contained 1,000–10,000 Ci at commissioning.
Etymology: Named after Marie Curie (1867–1934) and Pierre Curie (1859–1906) by the Radiology Congress in 1910, one year after Pierre's death. Marie Curie discovered polonium and radium, and pioneered quantitative work on radioactivity — a term she coined. She remains the only person to win Nobel Prizes in two different sciences (Physics 1903, Chemistry 1911).
About Kilobecquerel (kBq)
The kilobecquerel (kBq) equals 1,000 becquerels — 1,000 disintegrations per second. It is the practical unit for low-level environmental and food radioactivity measurements. Post-Chernobyl food restrictions in Europe set limits of 370–600 kBq/kg for certain foods. Household smoke detectors contain about 1 kBq of americium-241, enough to ionize air in the detection chamber without posing a meaningful external dose. Radon concentration in poorly ventilated buildings can reach tens of kBq/m³ in affected regions. Calibration check sources used in laboratory scintillation counters typically range from 0.1 to 10 kBq. Urine and environmental water samples in nuclear medicine facilities are typically measured and managed at the kBq level.
A household ionisation smoke detector contains approximately 1 kBq of Am-241. EU food safety limits after nuclear incidents are set at 370–600 kBq/kg for certain produce.
Curie – Frequently Asked Questions
Why was the curie originally defined as the activity of one gram of radium?
When Marie and Pierre Curie isolated radium in the early 1900s, it became the reference standard for radioactivity because it was the most intensely radioactive substance known and could be weighed on a balance. The Radiology Congress of 1910 defined the curie as the activity of one gram of Ra-226 — roughly 3.7 × 10¹⁰ disintegrations per second. That number was not chosen for mathematical elegance; it simply fell out of radium's half-life and atomic mass. It is one of the few scientific units defined by a specific lump of material rather than an abstract principle.
How does one curie compare to the radioactivity in everyday objects?
One curie is enormous by everyday standards. A human body contains about 0.1 microcuries of K-40 — one ten-millionth of a curie. A smoke detector holds about 1 microcurie. To reach one full curie of K-40, you would need roughly 140 kilograms of pure potassium. Conversely, a single spent nuclear fuel rod can contain millions of curies. The curie was designed for the world of radium laboratories and nuclear reactors; for anything you encounter in daily life, the microcurie or picocurie is the appropriate scale.
Is the curie still legally accepted for regulatory purposes in the United States?
Yes. The NRC, DOE, DOT, and EPA all accept curie-based units in filings, license applications, and transport documents. While 10 CFR Part 20 lists dose limits in both rem and sievert, the curie remains the default activity unit in most US regulatory practice. License conditions specify possession limits in millicuries or curies; transport labels use the Type A₂ values in curies; and waste manifests record activity in curie-based units. The US is unlikely to mandate a switch to becquerels without a broader metrication push that no one in Washington is championing.
What did Marie Curie actually carry around that exposed her to so much radiation?
Marie Curie personally processed tonnes of pitchblende ore to isolate fractions of a gram of radium salts — which she stored in her desk drawer and carried in her coat pocket. Her notebooks from the 1890s are still so contaminated with Ra-226 that they are kept in lead-lined boxes at the Bibliothèque nationale de France, and researchers must sign a liability waiver and wear protective clothing to view them. She died in 1934 of aplastic anaemia, almost certainly caused by decades of unshielded exposure to alpha, beta, and gamma radiation from radium, polonium, and radon gas in her poorly ventilated laboratory.
Why is 37 gigabecquerels such an oddly specific number for one curie?
It is not oddly specific — it is just 3.7 × 10¹⁰ Bq, the measured disintegration rate of one gram of Ra-226 rounded to two significant figures. When the curie was standardized in 1910, they measured radium's activity as precisely as they could and pinned the unit to that number. Later, more precise measurements showed the actual activity of one gram of Ra-226 is closer to 3.66 × 10¹⁰ dps, but the curie was redefined as exactly 3.7 × 10¹⁰ dps to keep the number clean. So the curie no longer exactly matches one gram of radium — it is off by about 1%.
Kilobecquerel – Frequently Asked Questions
How much radioactivity does a household smoke detector actually contain?
A standard ionisation smoke detector contains about 1 kBq (roughly 0.9 microcuries) of americium-241, an alpha emitter. That tiny speck of material ionizes air inside the detection chamber; when smoke particles disrupt the ion current, the alarm triggers. The alpha particles cannot penetrate the plastic casing, so the external dose is essentially zero. You would have to physically open the sealed source and inhale the material to face any health risk — which is why proper disposal matters but daily proximity does not.
Why did wild boar in Germany remain radioactive decades after Chernobyl?
German wild boar still exceed the 600 Bq/kg caesium limit 40 years after Chernobyl because of a phenomenon called the "wild boar paradox." The animals root in forest soil for deer truffles — underground fungi that concentrate Cs-137 from the soil far more efficiently than surface plants. Forest floors recycle caesium in a closed loop: leaves fall, decompose, fungi absorb the caesium, boar eat the fungi, boar excrete it back into the soil. Unlike farmland, which was plowed and diluted, forest ecosystems locked the caesium in a tight cycle. Hunters in Bavaria must still test every carcass before sale.
Why does radon in homes get measured in different units depending on the country?
The US measures radon in picocuries per liter (pCi/L) because the curie was the dominant unit when the EPA set its action levels in the 1980s. Most of the rest of the world uses becquerels per cubic meter (Bq/m³) because they adopted SI units. The EPA action level of 4 pCi/L equals about 148 Bq/m³; the WHO recommends action above 100 Bq/m³. Same phenomenon, different yardsticks — and a perpetual source of confusion when reading international radon guidelines.
Can you measure radioactivity in food at home or do you need a lab?
Consumer Geiger counters can detect gross contamination — the kind where food is obviously dangerous — but they cannot identify specific isotopes or give reliable Bq/kg readings. Proper food monitoring requires a gamma spectrometer with a shielded sodium iodide or high-purity germanium detector, plus a sample prepared to known geometry and mass. After Fukushima, Japan deployed thousands of these in public food monitoring stations where citizens could bring their own produce for free testing.
What is the most radioactive food you can buy in a normal grocery store?
Brazil nuts hold the record among common foods, with activity levels of 40–260 Bq/kg from radium-226 and radium-228 that the trees concentrate from soil. Lima beans and bananas follow at 170 and 130 Bq/kg respectively, mainly from potassium-40. None of these pose a health concern — the amounts are tiny compared to regulatory limits, and K-40 is self-regulating in the body. You would need to eat several hundred kilograms of brazil nuts daily before the radium intake became medically interesting.