Japan's top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga told reporters there was "nothing special detected from monitoring posts across the country", nor from air samples taken by the Air Self-Defense Force after yesterday's blast.
China's environment ministry today said that radiation levels near its Korean border were also normal.
"Results of monitoring make clear that this North Korean nuclear test as of now has produced no effect on our nation's environment or the public," the ministry wrote on its official website.
Fears of a leak from North Korea's detonation of what it claimed was a hydrogen bomb came after Chinese monitors detected a second tremor shortly after the initial earthquake triggered by the blast.
The monitors said the second tremor, of 4.6 magnitude, could be due to a "collapse (cave in)", suggesting the rock over the underground blast had given way.
The resulting explosion was considerably larger than previous tests and was felt by residents in Chinese cities hundreds of kilometres from the North's border.
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