Bananas are radioactive — and so are you
Potassium-40 is in every cell. Don't panic.

A Geiger counter clicks, a rhythmic pulse against the quiet hum of a kitchen. Its focus: a common yellow banana, nestled in a fruit bowl. Each click reports an atomic decay, an infinitesimal burst of energy emanating from within its peel.
The source of this subtle radiation is Potassium-40, an unstable isotope of the essential element potassium. Plants draw potassium from the soil, where it occurs naturally alongside its radioactive cousin. This means every bite of banana, every potato, and every leafy green carries a minute payload of atomic decay. Our own bodies, meticulously constructed from these very elements, contain Potassium-40 in every cell, continuously undergoing these gentle transformations. It is a fundamental component of our internal chemistry.
Life, as we know it, appears intertwined with this ubiquitous, low-level nuclear activity. The banana’s soft glow, imperceptible to our senses, is a faint echo of the elemental forces shaping our world, reminding us that even the most ordinary objects conceal profound cosmic truths.
Bananas are often used as a comparative measure for low-level radiation exposure, known as a Banana Equivalent Dose (BED).
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