4; rapid and positive identification of gamma-emitting radionuclides. The principles of in vivo gamma spectrometry as applied to human beings have been previously described.”* The stee! room constructed at BNL in 1957 for the Mafshallese surveys has been described ore- viously.* The “portable” 21-con steel room, 3 100, Quartz Line Storage Pulse-Height Analyzer). Two complete detectors and analyzers with the necessary associated electronic circuitry were taken along, since considerable difficulty had been experienced during the previous vear in main- taining the whole-body counting svstem opera- tional under the conditions of tropical heat and humidity. Housing of the electronic equipment in an air-conditioned, dehumidified room during 6-ft with 4-in.-chick steel walls, was used to operation was of considerable assistance in maintaining its stability. with a7 x8 10-ft air-conditioned wooden room, were known from the previous study to be due to counter (see Figure 50). The tratier was mounted on the tank deck of the Navy LST, and the sub- ciently high, it was only necessary to count the facilities where each subject washed and then for analysis. supply the required shielding (see Figure 49). This steel room was mounted on large trailer alang designed to house the electronic components ofthe jects to be counted were brought aboard up the ship’s ramp from the beach on each istandvisited. Also available on the tank deck were shower changed into an uncontaminated paper suit to avoid the possible risk of measuring any external contamination that might be present. A 5-in. NaI (Tl) crystal (Harshaw) was placed over the subject at a distance of 19 in. above the apex of the chair (see Figure 51). The pulses from the photomultiplier were fed into a linear ampli- fier (Cosmic Radiation Lab. Inc., Model 101), and thence into a 100-channel analyzer (TMC-PA 10,000 T i T COUNTS #5 MINUTES / 20 Key CHANNEL cs'3" (9.66 Mev) Since the principal photopeaks in these persons Cs'3* and Zn**, and since the levels were suffi- subjects for 5 or 10 min with the particular geometrical arrangement described above. The data were printed outon a paper tape of a Victor adding machine, andthe tapes were returned to BNL Analysis of Gamma-Ray Spectra The quantitative interpretation of the gammaray pulse-height data for the discrete gamma energies involved the graphical reduction of the data. A typical spectrum of a Marshallese is shown in Figure 52. The ordinate represents counts per 20-kev pulse-height increment, and the abscissa represents gamma energy. In the graphical stripping method emploved,**? the activity of the highest energy gamma-ray in the mixture, K*? (1.46-Mev), is determined directly from the ordinate value ofits total absorption peak. Then a A analytical procedures,and has made possible verv ~oet « ¥ used to supplemeng.quantitative radiochemical channel-by-channel subtraction of the distribution 1000 + L212 Mev) | Ko 100 (1.46Mev) corresponding to the abundanceofthis particular gamma-ray or radionuclide is made from the spectrum. When this subtraction is completed, the concentration of the gamma-ray of the next highest energy, Zn®* (1.14-Mev) can be estimated from the ordinate value of its peak. The distributlon corresponding to the concentration of the second gamma-rayis then subtracted from the remainingdistribution, and the process is continued with Cs'37 (0.66-Mev) until all the three major 0 L. Oo 020 040 1 i 1 060 O80 100 ENERGY (Mev) gamma-ray-emitting components have been determined. i 1.20 1. Figure 52. Gamma spectra of Marshallese male (subject 3¢4, age 40, wt 70 kg - solid line) and normalized plastic phantom (containing 0.64 uC Zn**, 1.22 uC Cs'9’, and 140 g K - dashed line), 1959. This stripping processis illustrated on a spec- trum of the plastic phantom containing known amounts of K*°, Cs'**, and Zn® (Figure 53). It is to be noted that at the concentrations used here (approximately the mean concentrations found in the Marshallese), the Compton contribution of 1185591 Bt

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