Inverse transport for the verification of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty

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Abstract

An international monitoring system is being built as a verification tool for the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. Forty stations will measure on a worldwide daily basis the concentration of radioactive noble gases. The paper introduces, by handling preliminary real data, a new approach of backtracking for the identification of sources of passive tracers after positive measurements. When several measurements are available the ambiguity about possible sources is reduced significantly. The approach is validated against ETEX data. A distinction is made between adjoint and inverse transport shown to be, indeed, different though equivalent ideas. As an interesting side result it is shown that, in the passive tracer dispersion equation, the diffusion stemming from a time symmetric turbulence is necessarily a selfadjoint operator, a result easily verified for the usual gradient closure, but more general. © 2003 European Geosciences Union.

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Issartel, J. P., & Baverel, J. (2003). Inverse transport for the verification of the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 3(3), 475–486. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-3-475-2003

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