Megabecquerel to Picocurie
MBq
pCi
Conversion History
| Conversion | Reuse | Delete |
|---|---|---|
1 MBq (Megabecquerel) → 27027027.027027 pCi (Picocurie) Just now |
Quick Reference Table (Megabecquerel to Picocurie)
| Megabecquerel (MBq) | Picocurie (pCi) |
|---|---|
| 10 | 270,270,270.27027 |
| 50 | 1,351,351,351.35135 |
| 185 | 4,999,999,999.999995 |
| 370 | 9,999,999,999.99999 |
| 500 | 13,513,513,513.5135 |
| 800 | 21,621,621,621.6216 |
| 1,000 | 27,027,027,027.027 |
About Megabecquerel (MBq)
The megabecquerel (MBq) equals one million becquerels and is the standard unit for nuclear medicine doses administered to patients. A typical FDG (fluorodeoxyglucose) PET scan uses 200–400 MBq of F-18; a thyroid scintigraphy study uses 80–200 MBq of Tc-99m. Diagnostic doses are carefully calibrated to balance image quality against patient radiation exposure. Radiopharmacies prepare and dispense doses in the MBq range under strict shielding and timing protocols because short half-lives mean significant decay between preparation and administration. Environmental release limits from nuclear facilities are often set in MBq per year for specific isotopes. Laboratory radiotracer experiments in biology and biochemistry typically use µCi to mCi amounts — equivalent to tens to hundreds of MBq.
A Tc-99m bone scan uses about 500–800 MBq. An F-18 FDG PET scan dose is typically 185–370 MBq injected into the patient.
About Picocurie (pCi)
The picocurie (pCi) equals one trillionth of a curie, or about 0.037 Bq (37 mBq) — 2.22 disintegrations per minute. It is the standard unit for radon gas concentration in US homes, expressed as pCi/L of air. The US EPA action level for indoor radon is 4 pCi/L; the average US indoor level is about 1.3 pCi/L. Radon, a naturally occurring decay product of uranium-238 in soil and rock, is the second leading cause of lung cancer in the US after smoking. Water radon concentrations, soil gas measurements, and low-level alpha spectroscopy results are all commonly reported in pCi. The picocurie scale makes everyday environmental radioactivity numerically convenient without scientific notation.
The US EPA recommends radon mitigation when indoor air exceeds 4 pCi/L. The average American home has about 1.3 pCi/L; outdoor air is roughly 0.4 pCi/L.
Megabecquerel – Frequently Asked Questions
Why do nuclear medicine doses use megabecquerels instead of smaller or larger units?
Diagnostic imaging doses fall neatly in the MBq range — a PET scan uses 185–370 MBq, a bone scan 500–800 MBq. Using becquerels would mean writing hundreds of millions; using gigabecquerels would mean awkward decimals like 0.37 GBq. MBq is the Goldilocks unit for the hospital pharmacy: large enough to avoid scientific notation, small enough to express a single patient dose as a tidy number on a syringe label.
How quickly does a nuclear medicine dose lose its radioactivity after injection?
That depends entirely on the isotope. Technetium-99m, the workhorse of diagnostic imaging, has a 6-hour half-life — so a 740 MBq injection drops to 370 MBq in 6 hours, 185 MBq in 12, and becomes negligible within 2 days. Fluorine-18 (used in PET) has a 110-minute half-life and is essentially gone in a day. Iodine-131 (used in therapy) lingers for about 8 days per half-life. Hospitals choose isotopes partly based on how fast they want the activity to vanish.
What happens to the radioactive waste from a nuclear medicine department?
Most diagnostic isotopes (Tc-99m, F-18) have half-lives under a day, so hospitals simply store waste in shielded bins and let it decay. After 10 half-lives — about 3 days for Tc-99m — the activity is down to less than 0.1% of the original and can be disposed of as normal clinical waste. Longer-lived therapeutic isotopes like I-131 require weeks of decay storage. The vast majority of nuclear medicine waste is never shipped to a radioactive disposal site; it just sits in a locked closet until physics solves the problem.
Is the radiation from a PET scan dangerous to people around the patient?
A patient injected with 370 MBq of F-18 for a PET scan emits gamma rays at a dose rate of roughly 5–6 µSv/hr at one meter. That means sitting next to them for two hours gives you about 10–12 µSv — less than a chest X-ray. Staff handle dozens of patients daily so they follow time-and-distance protocols, but for family members the exposure from a single visit is trivially small. The activity halves every 110 minutes, so by evening the patient is barely distinguishable from background.
Why are some medical isotopes always in short supply?
Molybdenum-99, which decays into the technetium-99m used in 30+ million scans per year worldwide, can only be produced in a handful of aging research reactors. It has a 66-hour half-life so it cannot be stockpiled — you have to make it, ship it, and use it within days. When a reactor goes down for maintenance (as happened in 2009 when both the Canadian NRU and Dutch HFR shut down simultaneously), hospitals worldwide face scan cancellations within a week. New production methods using particle accelerators and LEU targets are slowly diversifying supply.
Picocurie – Frequently Asked Questions
Why is 4 picocuries per liter the magic number for radon in US homes?
The EPA chose 4 pCi/L in 1986 as a practical action level — not a safety threshold. At the time, mitigation technology could reliably reduce levels to below 4 pCi/L but not much further. The risk at 4 pCi/L is roughly equivalent to smoking half a pack of cigarettes per day or having 200 chest X-rays per year. The EPA actually recommends considering mitigation at 2 pCi/L, but the 4 pCi/L number stuck because it was achievable and measurable with 1980s-era charcoal canisters.
How does radon get into a house in the first place?
Radon-222 is a gas produced by the natural decay of uranium-238 in soil and rock. Being a noble gas, it does not bind to soil particles — it seeps upward through cracks, gaps around pipes, sump pits, and any opening where the house contacts the ground. Indoor air pressure is slightly lower than soil gas pressure (the "stack effect"), so the house literally sucks radon in. A well-sealed, energy-efficient home can actually trap more radon than a drafty old one because there is less ventilation to dilute it.
Can you test for radon yourself or do you need a professional?
Short-answer: yes, DIY kits work fine for screening. Charcoal canister tests (2–7 days, about $15) and alpha-track detectors (90 days–1 year, about $25) are available at hardware stores and by mail. You place the device in the lowest liveable area with windows closed, mail it to a lab, and get results in pCi/L. For real estate transactions, most states require a certified professional using continuous radon monitors. If your DIY test reads above 4 pCi/L, a professional follow-up is wise before spending $800–2,500 on a mitigation system.
Why is radon the second leading cause of lung cancer if it is measured in tiny picocuries?
Picocuries sound small, but they add up over decades of continuous exposure. At 4 pCi/L, you inhale about 8 radon atoms per second with each breath, 24 hours a day, for years. It is not the radon itself that does the damage — radon decays into polonium-218 and polonium-214, which are solids that lodge in lung tissue and blast it with alpha particles at point-blank range. The EPA estimates radon causes about 21,000 lung cancer deaths per year in the US, mostly among smokers where radon and tobacco synergise.
Do granite countertops really emit dangerous levels of radon?
Granite contains trace uranium and therefore produces radon, but measured emission rates from countertops are typically 0.01–0.1 pCi/L contribution to room air — 10 to 100 times below the EPA action level. You would need to seal yourself in a phone booth with a granite slab to approach concerning concentrations. The radon-from-countertops scare peaked around 2008 when a few outlier samples made news, but systematic studies by the EPA and multiple universities consistently found negligible risk. Your basement floor is a vastly larger radon source.