FALLOUT MEASUREMENTS BY TOTAL-ABSORPTION
GAMMA-RAY SPECTROSCOPY

ROBERT S. FOOTE
Texas Instruments Incorporated, Dallas, Texas

ABSTRACT
The growth and the decay of gamma-ray-producing radionuclides in the

field near Dallas, Tex., have been measured since Dec, 22, 1962. All
data have been resolved to provide the effective surface amounts of the
fission-produced radionuclides as well as the natural gamma-ray
emitters. A discussion of the data-reduction procedure is included

which shows the capability of the method to account for the entire field
gamma-ray spectrum. Initial fallout measurements of fission debris

from the 1964 test by Communist China are included.
METHODS AND MEASUREMENTS
Gamma-ray-producing radionuclides in the field near Dallas, Tex.,
have been determined and monitored by the use of gamma-ray spectroscopy since Dec. 22, 1962. The objectives of these measurements
have been (1) to demonstrate the exactness and consistency with which

gamma-ray spectral data can be resolved from field data, (2) to op-

timize data-handling techniques, and (3) to follow the change of nuclear
fallout debris in the field.
A large, near-total gamma-ray-absorption NalI(T1l) crystal that is

11/4, in. in diameter and 4 in. thick and multichannel pulse-height-

analysis equipment consisting of a 400-channel analyzer operating in
the 200-channel mode have been used to measure the gamma-ray energy spectrum of the terrestrial gamma radiation. A 40-min multichatinel pulse-height-analyzer live time was the counting-time period

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