Appendix A DERIVATION of ALTITUDE ABSORPTION of GAMMA RADIATION Keran O’Brien, Radiation Branch, Health and Safety Laboratory The equation giving the dose rate above a hole in an infinite half-space that subtends an angle 4°, when the half-space is uniformly contaminated with a gamma where j is the disintegration per second per cubic cen- tumeter and E, is the average source energy. 1 v = of om, ‘ ay 20Y emitter, is described in Reference 10 and is: = y Where: E 20Y 0 i A. Ath, 8°) (A-1) E is the gamma energy emitted per cubic centimeter by the contaminant (A.8) . The constants may be converted to appropriate units to relate contamination density to gamma dose rate by: Ge (3,600) K = ————__ EQ Wee ois the density of the absorbing medium (A.9} his the height of the detector, in meters, and Y= ft the ratio of the total attenuation coBe Where: efficient to the energy absorption coefficient 4.8 x 10 Mesy He = 3.54% 10 %cm"! (for water} of the medium, corresponding to the source W = 3.25 = 107° Mev ( (32 5 ev ) energy 3,600 sec/hr For A: 8 c = 3.7.x 10" (photons/sec)/m? 1 . A(b, 6°) = ; {tuEi (—tu)+e —tu 1 B(ta)} Then: The dose rate above a plane, similarly contaminated, can be obtained by the partial derivative of Equation A.1 to obtain an infinitesimal thickness of slab: at oh dh = Ip = v where Cy with M(tu) = —E, (—tu) + eT B(tu)—B! (w)—1]) Where: B' (A.4) (A.5) = Sa i For the case of radiation from water or land contaminated with fission products, seen byan aircraftmounted detector, a finite diameter of contamination on the surface is described vy @ hali-angle sensitivity, 6. CASE I. Water contamination from Equation A. l. Lh, 6) = Ah, @°)-Ath, 6) (A.6) and EL Eg] Boy * Boy ' Cc Lh, 6°)R/hr v {A.10) Land Contamination: Jth, 6) = Mth, 6°)-—Mt¢h, 8) (A.13) HyEdh = (A.12) and 20Y HeEoK 20 where k represents disintegrations per second per The clearing on the surface also subtends on angle @. 4 ‘ j 289 2 = curies per cubic meter. CASE Il. oY 0.3549 (A.3) This is: Ip = oh dh M(tu) ° 108 cm3/m!, and E, is assumed to be 0.5 Mev (A.2) t = pyh, u = sec 6°, and Bitu) is a polynomial - (A.7) square centimeter. This reduces Equation 4.4 to: HeE gk d(h, 8") 0 ly ~ “5 (A.13) With the constants converted to appropriate units as in Case J, and 104 cm?/m’. ¢ GHe(3,600k 3,600)k K = er Ep DCE ANCHIVES Ip = 3.4427, J(h, éR/hr (A.14) (A.15} where Cp = curies per square meter. — ot