Design and deployment of radiological point-source arrays for the emulation of continuous distributed sources
Jayson R. Vavrek, C. Corey Hines, Mark S. Bandstra, Daniel Hellfeld,, Maddison A. Heine, Zachariah M. Heiden, Nick R. Mann, Brian J. Quiter,, Tenzing H.Y. Joshi

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel method using point-source arrays to emulate continuous gamma-ray sources for aerial detection, demonstrating design, deployment, and analysis techniques with high accuracy and scalability.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new approach for designing and deploying point-source arrays that accurately emulate continuous gamma-ray sources for aerial measurements.
Findings
Point-source arrays can effectively mimic continuous sources from several meters away.
The method achieves high placement accuracy and ease of reconfiguration.
Scalable to sources up to approximately 100 meters in size.
Abstract
We demonstrate a method for using arrays of point sources that emulate -- when measured from a standoff of at least several meters -- distributed gamma-ray sources, and present results using this method from outdoor aerial measurements of several planar arrays each comprising up to mCi Cu-64 sealed sources. The method relies on the Poisson deviance to statistically test whether the array source ''looks like'' its continuous analogue to a particular gamma-ray detector given the counts recorded as the detector moves about 3D space. We use this deviance metric to design eight different mock distributed sources, ranging in complexity from a m uniform square grid of sources to a configuration where regions of higher and zero activity are superimposed on a uniform baseline. We then detail the design, manufacture, and testing of the mCi Cu-64 sealed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies · Radioactive contamination and transfer · Radioactivity and Radon Measurements
