Safecast
Safecast is an international, volunteer-centered organization devoted to open citizen science for environmental monitoring. Safecast was established by Sean Bonner, Pieter Franken, and Joi Ito shortly after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in Japan, following the Tōhoku earthquake on 11 March 2011 and manages a global open data network for ionizing radiation and air quality monitoring.
The Safecast team, with help of International Medcom, Tokyo hackerspace, and other volunteers, has designed various for radiation mapping. Haiyan Zhang developed a widely used interactive map of radiation levels around Japan, and was a mapping consultant in the formative phase of Safecast. The Geiger counter-like devices developed include the bGeigie and bGeigie Nano for mobile applications as well as fixed stations called Pointcast. Despite being a citizen science project, professional quality and scientific grade data was sought from the onset, and the methodology and tool-sets Safecast developed and deployed are cited in scientific literature and by governments.
All data are collected via the and are presented on the publicly available interactive with global coverage.
Safecast later expanded to offer air quality sensors which also report to open crowdsourced maps.
As of 2020 the project has made 120 million observations and calculated mean dose rates for 330 cities around the world.
bGeigieZen by Safecast
In April 2021 Safecast announced development of a new device called bGeigie Zen. The device will be an updated version of the bGeigieNano with a lot of build in additional features like wireless uploading of data, wireless charging, replaceable LiPo battery, etc. More information can be found at https://bgeigiezen.safecast.jp/.bGeigieZen is based on original bGeigie but uses a new sensor board, the SafePulse and M5Stack modular IoT platform. The presented prototype was built in bigger Pelican 1015 case. It is much simpler to build and can be built in a fraction of the time it would take to build the original bGeigieNano.
The bGeigieZen and other safecast devices can be purchased at safecast devices shop : https://bgiegiezen.safecast.jp
bGeigie Nano
Safecast bGeigie Nano is a portable radiation detector equipped with a Geiger–Müller tube type detector, built-in GPS and logging to microSD card.Image:Safecast Tile Map screenshot.jpeg|250px|right|thumb|Screenshot of Safecast Tile Map website with data visualization
The bGeigie Nano is available as a kit, so the user needs to learn how to solder in order to build it from the supplied parts. Until November 2020 the kit could be purchased from the Kithub product page. The device was developed in collaboration with International Medcom Inc. and shares some parts with their detector. According to the "bGeigie Nano is a lighter version of the bGeigie Mini using an Arduino Fio, a GpsBee, an OpenLog and an Inspector Alert geiger counter. The aim is to make everything fit in a Pelican Micro Case 1040".
The final version of the bGeigie is placed inside the smaller Pelican Micro Case 1010. It features the LND 7317 pancake Geiger-Mueller tube type detector, a GPS receiver and is expandable with a Bluetooth module. The mode switch offers choice between geotagged radiation logging and measuring without GPS - showing also Bq/m2 values. Inside the case the unit is calibrated for gamma radiation. The main unit taken out of its case will additionally do α- and β-detection for careful use as a surface contamination spot meter.
Safecast devices are also used by the following institutions:
- International Atomic Energy Agency
- Institute for Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety / Institut de radioprotection et de sûreté nucléaire, France
- Natural Resources Defense Council, United States
- Czech National Radiation Protection Institute / , Czech Republic
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and the "bGeigies for Ukraine" initiative
Following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and especially the Capture of Chernobyl and the activities of the Russian forces in the contaminated areas of the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone including digging trenches or using the highly contaminated Red Forest as a route for their convoys initiated a request for a new radiation mapping of the region after the withdrawal of Russian troops.On July 20, 2022, Safecast announced the "bGeigies4Ukraine" initiative - joint initiative of:
- Safecast, Japan
- , Ukraine
- National Radiation Protection Institute / , Czech Republic
- , Ukraine
All the data gathered within #bgeigies4ukraine initiative are part of the interactive Safecast Map and the dataset is available under CC0 license.