- Ernest J. Sternglass
Ernest J. Sternglass (born 1923,
Berlin ) is a Ph.D. Americanphysicist and author, best known for his controversial research on the health risks of low-level radiation from atmospheric testing ofnuclear weapons and from nuclear power plants. [ [http://www.nei.org/keyissues/safetyandsecurity/factsheets/scienceonradiationhealtheffectsdispelstoothfairyprojectpage4 |List of criticisms of Sternglass' Methodology on industry website] ] He is an emeritus professor at theUniversity of Pittsburgh .Biography
Both of Sternglass' parents were physicians. The Sternglass family left Germany in 1938, when Ernest was fourteen. He completed high school at the age of sixteen, then entered Cornell, registering for an engineering program. His family's financial troubles forced him to leave school for a year; by the time he returned to Cornell, the US had entered World War II. Sternglass volunteered for the navy. He was about to ship out when the atomic bomb was detonated over
Hiroshima .After the war, Sternglass married. In
Washington, D.C. he worked as a civilian employee at theNaval Ordinance Laboratory , which researched military weapons. Sternglass began studyingnight vision devices , which led him to work with radiation. In 1947, his first son was born, and he got a chance to meetAlbert Einstein .From 1952 to 1967 Sternglass worked at the
Westinghouse Research Laboratory . All his work there involved nuclear instrumentation. At first he studiedfluoroscopy , which "exposes an individual to a considerable dose of radiation." Then he worked on a new kind of television tube for satellites. Eventually he was put in charge of the Lunar Station program at Westinghouse.In the early 1960s Sternglass ran across the work of Dr.
Alice Stewart . Stewart was head of the Department of Preventive Medicine ofOxford University , responsible for a pioneering study on the effects of low-level radiation inEngland . Stewart had discovered that a small amount of radiation to an unborn child could double the child's chances forleukemia andcancer . Sternglass was also upset by people such asHerman Kahn who minimized the dangers of atomic war. He has noted thatLinus Pauling had been warning people all through the fifties that there was no safe threshold of radiation.Sternglass spent the 1960s studying the effect of nuclear fallout on infants and children. He found not only an increase in leukemia and cancer, but a significant increase in
infant mortality .In 1963, Dr. Sternglass testified before the congressional
Joint Committee on Atomic Energy regarding the level of strontium-90 in baby teeth. The result of bomb-test fallout, strontium-90was associated with increased childhood leukemia. His studies played a role in thePartial Test Ban Treaty signed by PresidentJohn F. Kennedy .Sternglass is Director, Cofounder, and Chief Technical Officer of the
Radiation and Public Health Project (RPHP).On a different note Dr. Sternglass has written a book called "Before the Big Bang: the Origins of the Universe", in which he offers a compelling argument for Lemaitre's provocative theory of the primeval atom. He offers compelling technical data showing the plausibility of an original super massive relativistic electron-positron pair. This particle contained the entire mass of the universe and through a series of 270 divisions created everything that now exists. If true, this would help ameliorate some of the problems with the current models, namely inflation and black hole singularities.
Criticisms of Sternglass' Methodology
Sternglass' research has been frequently criticized by local, state and federal environmental and health agencies, when the results of his research on the health effects of low level radiation could not be verified by peer review. [ [http://www.nei.org/keyissues/safetyandsecurity/factsheets/scienceonradiationhealtheffectsdispelstoothfairyprojectpage4 Nuclear Energy Institute - Peer-Reviewed Science on Radiation Health Effects Dispels ‘Tooth Fairy Project’ ] ] Sternglass has been accused of using faulty methodology, including selection bias, in his research. [ [http://www.nei.org/keyissues/safetyandsecurity/factsheets/scienceonradiationhealtheffectsdispelstoothfairyprojectpage4 |List of criticisms of Sternglass' Methodology on industry website] ] [ [http://glasstone.blogspot.com/ Effects of Nuclear Weapons Tests: Scientific Facts ] ]
See also
*
Downwinders
*Radiation Exposure Compensation Act
*Background radiation
*Ionizing radiation
*Radiation poisoning
*Radioactive contamination
*Health physics
*National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy Books
* Ernest J. Sternglass (1981) "Secret Fallout: low-level radiation from Hiroshima to Three-Mile Island". ISBN 0-07-061242-0. Originally published in 1972 under the title "Low-Level Radiation".
* Ernest J. Sternglass (1997) "Before the Big Bang: the origins of the universe". ISBN 1-56858-087-8.References
* [http://www.ratical.org/radiation/inetSeries/nwEJS.html "Nuclear Witnesses." (Bio detail)]
* Herman Kahn. "On Thermonuclear War". Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1960.External links
* [http://radiation.org/index.html Radiation and Public Health Project website]
* [http://www.ratical.org/radiation/inetSeries/ejs1192.html 1992 interview]
* [http://www.ratical.org/radiation/SecretFallout/ Dr. Sternglass' book "Secret Fallout" is available as a free download. (April, 2006)]
* [http://www.ntanet.net/threemile.html Criticism of Sternglass' findings]
* [http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/conversations/Pauling/pauling3.html Pauling on 1958 petition signed by 2,000 American scientists]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.