model, therefore, we consider a future test programmein which the amountof Sr®” generated

per three-year period is equal to that created between the spring of 1954 and the spring of
1957. If the deposition rate is assumed to be 25% per year, this quantity, from the last para-

emete yet

The last model to be considered is one in which the future rate of injection of Sr’’ into the
stratosphere is assumed to remain constant at the level of the past few years. The actual
deposition at Milford Haven during these years has not been consistent with this assumption
which would lead to a greater increase from year to year than is actually observed. For this

graph and Fig. 2, will be approximately 16.8 mc/km’, correspondingto an effective creation
rate of 5.6 mc/km?/year. With these assumptions, an equilibrium value of about 200 mc/km?

FoF

PG

ET

Poy

SUMMER

fl

PG

WINTER

SS ok

40

bw ae

will be reached in about 100 years. If the deposition rate be assumed to be 12% per year, the
ultimate equilibrium level will be approximately 300 mc/km’.

at

30 }—

I A na 0. igh

=
x

& 20 FoO

li
x

_

1Of—- Len

— ee mee

-_——a a

T=

a

>
“ee”

ope_t
30°

1

|

60°

—

i

| | ti
30°

Te

ML

fy

oO
LATITUDE

ft

|

ft

30°

tt

dt)

60°

90°

Fig. 7—- Atmospheric circulation model (after Dobson and Brewer).

10 CONCLUSIONS
The programme of measurements described has revealed some interesting and important
features of the exchange processes between the stratosphere and the troposphere which give

of Cs’ measurement has been started with the gamma-ray spectrometer on air filters which
have been collected over the past few years. The object is to study the simultaneous variation

of the Cs!" concentrations in rain water and in tropospheric and stratospheric air. It is hoped

to acquire more data to test the theory which has been advanced for the transfer of fission
products from the stratosphere to ground. In this same connection, measurements of the
meridional distribution of fission products in the stratosphere would be of interest and, in

244

et bbe

more information could be gleaned about the size of the stratospheric reservoir of activity. A
programmeof stratospheric sampling up to 14,000 metres, comparable with that described in
HP/R 2017' but more sustained, is now being planned in the U. K. In the meantime a programme

we eOP-el cy

ever, such a programme would limit the number of sampling stations which could be operated,

and the present arrangement is a fair compromise. Forecasting would also be improved if

tes

pling points it might be possible to obtain reasonable values for the integral of sr*° deposition
over the surface of the earth. A summary of the main results is given in the abstract at the
front of the report.
In order to forecast future ground-level concentrations from existing data, it is important
to distinguish between tropospheric and stratospheric fallout and the differentiation could be
improved by reducing the present sampling period from three months and by including one or
more short-lived isotopes in the radiochemical analysis. For a given analytical effort, how-

ae weee

rise to a non-uniform deposition pattern of long-lived fission products over the surface of the
earth. The relative smoothness of this pattern suggests that with a sufficient number of sam-

Select target paragraph3