222Rn is a noble radioactive gas produced along the 238U decay
chain, which is present in the majority of soils and rocks. As 222Rn is
the most relevant source of natural background radiation, understanding its
distribution in the environment is of great concern for investigating the
health impacts of low-level radioactivity and for supporting regulation of
human exposure to ionizing radiation in modern society. At the same time,
222Rn is a widespread atmospheric tracer whose spatial distribution is
generally used as a proxy for climate and pollution studies. Airborne gamma-ray
spectroscopy (AGRS) always treated 222Rn as a source of background since
it affects the indirect estimate of equivalent 238U concentration. In this
work the AGRS method is used for the first time for quantifying the presence of
222Rn in the atmosphere and assessing its vertical profile. High
statistics radiometric data acquired during an offshore survey are fitted as a
superposition of a constant component due to the experimental setup background
radioactivity plus a height dependent contribution due to cosmic radiation and
atmospheric 222Rn. The refined statistical analysis provides not only a
conclusive evidence of AGRS 222Rn detection but also a (0.96 ± 0.07)
Bq/m3222Rn concentration and a (1318 ± 22) m atmospheric layer
depth fully compatible with literature data.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, 2 table