KELLOGG!
(continued)

scavenging by dust, ond as * tentative explanetion I think ve can invoke
the fact that we have very strong internal cirgulation seff

up imeiiately,

and at the mories this afternoon it vill desnstrate this

think, and the

strong internal circulationalééds causes the dust colum td move into the

firedall in this way, and the air gets in first. ‘The redidactive material
almcct immediately epreats itself out into the doughnut padt of the cloud,

and later the dust vhich contimues to pour into the gushrods merely circles
sround the Goughaut, and never reaches the redionctive cord, which is now
here and here, and this, os I say, is a tentative explanatfon, enl we simply

felt that we verentt happy about observations until we hed isome idea of how
this occurs.

Jicw if we cen heve the lights....

We're going to move on to what ve've done about

raincdt, and raincus

is a more difficult thing to talk about, because as I've mentioned, we don't
have any well documented cases of raincut, where we can m

a hypothesis

and cay, vell, 1t heppened in such and such a way on such nd such a date,

that these vere the conditions, therefore out hypothesis s
out of not as the case my de.

%2 be borne

We bave almost no information on raipout

except ecme inforantion fron the Harverd people, Dr, Bell,| DaTRAD,
who have mide careful observations of the resdicactivity
however the thing that's lecking there to some extent1

i rain, and
area) aixen

detailed informtion about the structure of the rain storafs
tt dows.

So we've had to rely on a theoretical approach

ig

b droweet

ta what ome would

oxpect from rain.

Firot, and I think the most cbvious approach, would bd to say vint
happene vben @ falling drop falls through « eloul of pilcdctive particles.
We appracched this by looking at the Langsuir theory for

Sllections by a

Departmont -« ~

OM gtr

3/

Select target paragraph3