— history. 4-4OH On the remaining tests, the detectors were installe: in the Alpha blockhouses and viewed the bomb center through collimation holes or pipes. Four Alpha blockhouses were maintained by EG&G to make possible Alpha coverage for the various shot areas. These stations were No. 1310, Yvonne; No. 1312, Janet; and Nos. 1311 and 1525, Irene. To obtain at the detectors a signal representative of the neutron @aignal, it was advisable to limit the emerging gammas by an aperture near the device, In addition, collimation at the detectors was accomplished by means of pipes which extended through the thickness of the blockhouse wall. Inside the detector room were adjustable baffle walls containing collimation holes, which were spaced for alignment with the detectors. The system provided for collimation ratios as high as 50:1. The physical properties of the detector areas varied from station to station, but in all cases both the source aperture and the detector collimators were in alignment with the device at the point or points of interest, and the detectors had their center lines along the aiming line. Actual detector alignment was done by transit. When it was necessary to reduce the gamma signal, attenuators were used. These were in the form of lead shielding placed either in the collimation indentations on the inner blockhouse walls or in front of the detectors on their scaffold platforms. Simulation of shot conditions in the detectors was nipok (ih, RG an ra accomplished by means of flash tubes which operated near the expected alpha value. . co COP! 2 } tani oA0k, 4 jo oy PAGE A<9y*

Select target paragraph3