New Hand-Held Detector Determines Radiation Type
Red Leader writes: "This article covers a new portable radiation detector. A serious problem with conventional Geiger counters is that they don't indicate the type of radiation they're picking up. Thus, fissile material can be disguised as medical stuffs. This device uses a 'low-power cryogenic cooling mechanism originally designed for the aerospace industry' to cool a germainum detector rather than a really big thick-walled steel tank of liquid nitrogen."
Medical personalle will not be carrying Uranium on a plane.
"Time is long and life is short, so begin to live while you still can." -EV
Since there are no unique medical uses for uranium, that shouldn't be a problem.
"It take 9 months to bear a child, no matter how many women you assign to the job."
But that's not the point here - this is for scanning packages in bulk at customs, etc. Basically this allows anybody to seperate out non-medical controlled radioactives from medical controlled radioactives.
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evan
"$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
The advantage of the GeLi detectors is very good energy resolution for gamma rays, but they do need to be cooled. The breakthrough is using a portable cooling source so you don't need to drag an LN2 dewar around.
"Uranium is uranium" is a big misunderstanding on your part - U-238 and U-235 have very different properties (and distinct gamma spectra). It would be extremely helpful to know if a Uranium sample was depleted, natural or highly enriched.
A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
As other psoters have mentioned, Uranium does not have medical uses.
However, Plutonium-238 was (is?) used as a power source in some pacemakers. It's not the bomb isotope, so I guess this detector will be able to tell the difference.
They didn't specifically say that they use a GeLi detector (they could also use high purity Ge).
One should mention that GeLi detectors need to be cooled all the time, even when not in operation, otherwise the Li distribution in the Ge crystal would be destroyed and the detector useless. This is not the case for high purity Ge detectors.
Now, the amount involved is a few micrograms so I doubt that it is of concern anyway. But it is a legitimate medical use.
sPh
Could have used mercuric iodide detectors. Then they would have only needed to use a simple Peltier cooler. Been used for a decade and a half in portable x-ray fluorescence spectrometers manufactured by my previous employer. (I performed R&D work with on these detectors.)
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