Measurements of fast neutrons in Hiroshima by use of 39Ar |
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Authors: | Eckehart Nolte Werner Rühm H. Hugo Loosli Igor Tolstikhin Kazuo Kato Thomas C. Huber Stephen D. Egbert |
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Affiliation: | (1) Physics Department, Technical University of Munich, 85747 Garching, Germany;(2) Institute for Radiation Biology, University of Munich, Munich, Germany;(3) Institute of Radiation Protection, GSF–National Research Center for Environment and Health, 85764 Neuherberg, Germany;(4) Institute of Physics, University of Bern, Sidlerstrasse 5, Bern, Switzerland;(5) Geological Institute, Kola Scientific Centre, RAS, 184200 Apatity, Russia;(6) Department of Radiological Sciences, Hiroshima Prefectural College of Health Sciences, Mihara, Japan;(7) Science Applications International Corporation, 10260 Campus Point Drive, San Diego, CA 92121, USA |
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Abstract: | The survivors of the A-bomb explosions over Hiroshima and Nagasaki were exposed to a mixed neutron and gamma radiation field. To validate the high-energy portion of the neutron field and thus the neutron dose to the survivors, a method is described that allows retrospective assessment of the fast neutrons from the A-bombs. This is accomplished by the extraction of the noble gas argon from biotites separated from Hiroshima granite samples, and then the detection of the (39)Ar activity that was produced by the capture of the fast neutrons on potassium. Adjusted to the year 1945, activities measured in the first samples taken at distances of 94, 818, 992, and 1,173 m from the hypocenter were 6.9+/-0.2, 0.32+/-0.01, 0.14+/-0.02, and 0.09+/-0.01 mBq/g K, respectively. All signals were significantly above detector background and show low uncertainties. Considering their uncertainties they agree with the calculated (39)Ar activation in the samples, based on the most recent dosimetry system DS02. It is concluded that this method can be used to investigate samples obtained from large distances in Hiroshima, where previous data on fast neutrons are characterized by considerable uncertainties. Additionally, the method can be used to reconstruct the fast neutron fluence in Nagasaki, where no experimental data exist. |
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