Smuggling of special nuclear materials and nuclear devices through borders and ports of entry constitutes a major risk to global security. Technologies are needed to reliably screen the flow of commerce for the presence of high-Z materials such as uranium and plutonium. Here, we present an experimental proof-of-concept of a technique that uses inelastic (p, p0) nuclear reactions to generate monoenergetic photons, which provide means to measure the areal density and the effective-Z (Zeff) of an object with an accuracy surpassing that achieved by current methods. We use an ION-12SC superconducting 12 MeV proton cyclotron to produce 4.4, 6.1, 6.9, and 7.1 MeV photons from a variety of nuclear reactions. Using these photons in a transmission mode, we show that we are able to accurately reconstruct the areal densities and Zeff of a test object. This methodology could enable mobile applications to screen commercial cargoes with high material specificity, providing a means of distinguishing common cargo materials from high-Z materials that include uranium and plutonium.
CITATION STYLE
Lee, H. Y., Henderson, B. S., Nelson, R. G., & Danagoulian, A. (2020). Multiple monoenergetic gamma radiography (MMGR) with a compact superconducting cyclotron. Journal of Applied Physics, 128(11). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0002201
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