CHAPTER 6
FEASIBILITY OF DEVELOPING FALLOUT-PREDICTION TECHNIQUES
FOR OPERATIONAL APPLICATION
A number of fallout-prediction systems have been developed in

response to a variety of needs.

These are widely used in damage

assessment and training exercises, in scientific, engineering, and

military studies, and in the prediction of fallout during the conduct

of nuclear tests.
The general aspects of such prediction systems is that
they predict fallout patterns before the fact, using assumed or known
yields, heights of burst, locations, and winds.
None of them use
reports of fallout intensity as a basis for fallout predictions at
locations further downwind.
Civil defense can use existing prediction

systems only in planning and not operationally, since these systems
require the inherently unknowable details of the enemy's plans for
attack, and their accuracy is limited by uncertainties in weather

parameters.
What civil-defense authorities can hope to do operationally
during and after the attack is to give the best possible advice to
the population on where the fallout is, where it will go, when it
will get there and at what levels, and where to move to--if that is a

viable alternative.

The kind of prediction system needed to do these

things is quite different from existing systems.

In an effort to meet this need, a monitoring and prediction method

based on observation of the unfolding fallout event was developed and

tested by the Research Directorate of DCPA in the undocumented RESEX I
exercise.
The method utilized available weather data and techniques to

predict the fallout sector once the location and general magnitude of

detonation were established.
Information on eertain fallout parameters-time when the exposure rate became 0.5 R/hr, time of peak exposure rate,
time when exposure rate exceeded or decreased to 50 R/hr, etc,-- were
reported by operating areas to higher headquarters (county, state, and

regional EOC's) where the data were plotted and extrapolated in time and

distance to provide warning and the same fallout parameters for locations
farther downwind.
The existence of the RESEX 1 exercise shows that a real-time
extrapolative prediction of fallout is to some extent feasible.
However,

there is a question whether such a system could be made to work in the

attack situation, what with its critical dependence on the ability to
receive data from the field and to disseminate information back.
The
questions have not been resolved to the Subcommittee's satisfaction.
Nevertheless, it is self-evident that a system using current and real
data is preferable to before-the-fact prediction.

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