CHAPTER 2 - EFFECTS OF SMALL CHANGES IN BURST
HEIGHT ON THE AMOUNT OF LOCAL FALLOUT
lz

When fallout models are used in hypothetical nuclear war

studies, the weapons usually are assumed to detonate either as true

air bursts, in which case no local fallout is assumed; or as true
surface bursts, in which case about two-thirds of the total amount
of radioactivity, as normalized to one hour after the detonation, is

assumed to be deposited in local fallout. In an actual attack on
a city some incoming enemy weapons are likely to impact on a building
rather than directly on the ground, especially if they arrive along a
non-vertical pathway such as one that would be followed by an incoming
ICBM. If such weapons are fuzed to detonate on contact, the detonations therefore could occur some distance above the ground.

Presumably

for this reason, the amount of radioactivity in local fallout would
be reduced compared to that of a true surface burst of the same type
weapon. The material of Chapter 2 can be used to estimate how much
the local fallout would be reduced due to this "height-of-burst"
effect.

2. If Curve B of Figure 2 of the Fallout Subcommittee's repor
applies to the building height vs local fallout production shenonenaf
as suggested in the report, an equation can be derived which, when *
corrected for ground roughness and instrument response, is as follows:

a.

where:

Ky = e7365 - 1.599 x 10

-2

A (R/hr)/(kt/sq mi) at 1 hour

1/3
_
:
@ \ == scaled height
of burst = h/w

-

@

h is height in feet of building where detonation
occurs

@

wis in kilotons of total yield

@

\ is any positive value equal to or less than 100

@

for } values greater than 100, the K, value for % = 100
applies,

b. To illustrate, assume that h = 400 feet (i.e., about a
40-story building) and that whe total ield, all of which is due

to fission, is 1-MT.

Then

= 400/\/1000 = 40,

Ky = e645 = 1017 (R/hr) /(kt/sq mi).
II-7

In which case

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