Gamma Imagers for Nuclear Security and Nuclear Forensics: Recommendations based on results from a side-by-side intercomparison
L.E. Sinclair, P.R.B. Saull, A. McCann, A.M.L. MacLeod, N.J. Murtha, A. El-Jaby, G. Jonkmans

TL;DR
This paper compares two gamma imaging technologies, semiconductor and scintillator-based, to guide their optimal use in nuclear security and forensics operations, highlighting strengths, limitations, and future directions.
Contribution
It presents a side-by-side intercomparison of two gamma imagers from different technological backgrounds to inform operational choices in nuclear security.
Findings
Semiconductor gamma imagers offer high resolution but are more expensive.
Scintillator-based imagers provide broader area coverage with faster response.
The intercomparison guides effective deployment of gamma imagers in tiered security responses.
Abstract
Nuclear security operations and forensic investigations require the utilization of a suite of instruments ranging from passive gamma spectrometers to high-precision laboratory sample analyzers. Gamma spectroscopy survey is further broken down into wide-area search performed with large-volume scintillator-based mobile survey spectrometers which are integrated with geographic position sensors for mapping and identification of hot zones, and high-precision long-dwell measurements using solid state spectrometers for follow-on characterization to establish isotopic content and ratios. While performing well at detecting the presence, quantity and type of radioactivity, all of these methods have limited ability to determine the location of a source of radioactivity. In recent years, technology advances have resulted in gamma imager devices which can create an image of the distribution of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies · Radioactivity and Radon Measurements · Radioactive contamination and transfer
