Abstract

The detection of high-energy γ-ray sources is vitally important to national security for numerous reasons, particularly nuclear materials smuggling interdiction and threat detection. This article presents two methods of detecting and locating a concealed nuclear γ-ray source by analyzing detector data of emissions that have been modulated with a coded mask. The advantages of each method, derived from a simulation study and experimental data, are discussed. Energetic γ-rays readily penetrate moderate amounts of shielding material and can be detected at distances of many meters. Coded masks are spatial configurations of shielding material (e.g., small squares formed from plates of lead or tungsten) placed in front of a detector array to modulate the radiation distribution. A coded mask system provides improved detection through an increased signal-to-noise ratio. In a search scenario it is impossible to obtain a comparison background run without the presence of a potential concealed source. The developed analysis methods simultaneously estimate background and source emissions and thus provide the capability to detect and locate a concealed high-energy radiological source in near real time. An accurate source location estimate is critically important to expedite the investigation of a high-probability γ-ray source. The experimental examples presented use a proof-of-concept coded mask system of a 4 × 4 array of NaI detectors directed at a γ-ray source in a field-of-view roughly 4 m wide × 3 m high (approximately the size of the side panel of a small freight truck). Test results demonstrate that the correct location of a radiologic source could be determined in as little as 100 seconds when the source was 6 m from the detector.

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