2 6 $eeghtare SASS 154 RADIATION STANDARDS, INCLUDING FALLOUT Representative Price. Without objection, your statement will be carried in full, and the document you mentioned will be carried in the record. Dr. Lancuam. Thank you. (The documents referred to follow:) GamMa Ray Dose From SnHort-Livep Fission Propucts FroM NUCLEAR-WEAPON TrstTs Philip F. Gustafson, Division of Biological and Medical Research, Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, Tl. The y-ray dose from short-lived fission products deposited on the ground may constitute the major source of whole-body radiation during the testing of nuclear weapons in the atmosphere and for some months thereafter. The magnitude of this dose relative to that from ground-deposited Cs™ depends critically upon the time that it takes nuclear debris to travel from the site of detonation to the point of deposition. The transport ‘time in turn is dependent upon the size of the detonation, the altitude and latitude at whi.’ it occurs, and the time of year of its injection into the atmosphere. Nuclear debris from a small (kiloton range) surface burst is confined within the troposphere and hence is completely deposited within a few months. Asa result the amount of short-lived radioactivity relative to that from Cs™ is large, although the absolute magnitude of the concentration is small. In the ease of a high-altitude burst (30 kilometers or higher), regardless of size, many months and even years may elapse before an appreciable fraction of the debris reaches the ground. The decay of much of the short-lived component before deposition leads to a lower dose relative to Cs”. There is also a latitude effect, in that debris injected into the low polar stratosphere (a portion also being present initially in the adjacent troposphere) will be deposited somewhat more rapidly than that from an equivalent injection into the low equatorial stratosphere. The rate of removal of nuclear debris from the stratosphere is not constant, but undergoes seasonal variations, being greatest during the spring months in the hemisphere in question and least during the autumn and winter. The corresponding variation in the concentration of Cs, for example, in surface air is illustrated in figure 1. The repetitive cycle of maximums and minimumsis of meteorological origin as shown by its occurrence during 1959 to 1961 in the absence of nuclear testing. This phenomenon is believed to result from the subsidence of the airmass over the winter pole with a subsequent influx of stratospheric debris into the lower atmosphere during the spring. The strong influence of the polar stratosphere explains in large part the more rapid removal of debris injected in polar regions. The variation in removal rate from one month to the next does not preclude a reasonably constant annual removal rate. A measure of the annual removal rate or mean stratospheric residence time may be obtained by comparing successive maximums or minimums as shown in figure 1. Three nuclear test situations will be considered regarding the gamma ray dose due to short-lived fission products: (1) Injection into the low polar stratosphere, (2) injection into the low equatorial stratosphere, (3) high-altitude detonation or injection. Small detonations. whose debris is contained within the troposphere, will not be considered because of the relatively small amount of radioactivity produced therein. The following radionuclides have been considered in computing the y-dose from fission products on the ground: Zr®-Nb™, Ru'®. Ru’, Ce, Oe!pr, Ba-La’®, and Cs. I has been omitted because of its short half-life. Sb** becomes of some relative importance 2 years after a test; however, the accuracy of measurement of this nuclide in soil has not been sufficient to warrant its consideration at this time. The concentration of the various nuclides in soil has been determined by means of gamma ray spectrometry of soil cores. Monthly increments in deposition have been determined in part by direct analysis of soil and in part by analyses of precipitation and air samples. SRReetsecinRgMatMORies aia

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