DocumentCode
1487384
Title
The Advancement of a Technique Using Principal Component Analysis for the Non-Intrusive Depth Profiling of Radioactive Contamination
Author
Adams, Jamie C. ; Joyce, Malcolm J. ; Mellor, Matthew
Author_Institution
Engineering Department, Lancaster University, Lancaster,
Volume
59
Issue
4
fYear
2012
Firstpage
1448
Lastpage
1452
Abstract
A significant development of the principal component analysis technique, to non-intrusively infer the depth of the fission fragment cesium-137, when it is buried under silica sand has been described. In this paper we describe the advancement of the technique by further validating it using blind tests for applications outside of the laboratory, where not only the depth
but also the surface
location of
-ray emitting contamination is often poorly characterized. Also uncertainty analysis has been conducted to test the robustness of the technique. At present the technique has been tested at the point of maximum activity above the entrained
-ray emitting source (where the optimal
,
location is known). This is not usually practical in poorly characterized environments where the detector cannot be conveniently placed at such an optimal location to begin with and scanning at multiple points around the region of interest is often required. Using a uniform scanning time, the point of maximum intensity can be located by sampling in terms of total count rate, and converging on this optimal point of maximum intensity.
Keywords
Contamination; Detectors; Phantoms; Principal component analysis; Radioactive materials; Depth profiling; gamma spectroscopy; gamma-rays; principal component analysis (PCA); radioactive contamination; shielding;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9499
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNS.2012.2189128
Filename
6179352
Link To Document