Chapter 4 CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 4.1- CONCLUSIONS The project had only limited success in meeting its objectives for Shot Wahoo, but met most of its objectives for Shot Umbrella. The conclusions are meant to apply only to the specific test conditions and radiological environments encountered aboard the moored and washed target ships. 4.1.1 Total Gamma Radiation Aboard Target Ships. The gamma radiation data indicated rapid rates of change with time after burst, and dependence upon distance from surface zero. These characteristics are summarized in Table 4.1 for the washed weather-deck areas. After Shot Wahoo, the weather-deck doses accumulated more slowly but eventually reached values on the order of 300 r higher than for Shot Umbrella, even though the ships were from 1,000 to 2,000 feet farther from surface zero. For nuclear-weapon-delivery situations simulated by the two closer-in ships, temporary immobilization could result in lethal or near-lethal doses. After Shot Wahoo, the majority of compartments received doses in excess of 500 r aboard DD 474 and in excess of 200 r aboard DD 592. After Shot Umbrella, the two ships received doses in excess of 200 r in many compartments. Ratios of dose or dase rate in compartments to dose or dose rate on the weather decks were dependent upon changes in radiation-source geometries and upon the presence of contaminants inside the ships. In one instance a dose-rate ratio changed by a factor of 1,000 within 28 minutes. The long-term dose ratios ranged between 0.36 and 0.63 for nonmachinery compartments on or above the main deck, between 0.14 and 0.46 for other nonmachinery compartments, between 0.08 and 0.20 for machinery spaces above the waterline, and between 0.02 and 0.07 for machinery spaces below the waterline. 4.1.2 Remote-Source Gamma Radiation. For the washed weather-deck areas, the observed total radiation can adequately represent the remote-source radiation during the first 10 minutes after the shots. At least 95 and 98 percent of the total dose on the washed decks was attributed to radiation from airborne radioactivity for Shots Umbrella and Wahoo, respectively. On DD 474 and DD 592, a very-early radiation peak was observed between 0.5 and 6 seconds after Shot Umbrella but the dose from this effect was negligible, i.e., less than 0.13 r. No data was available to indicate whether similar very-early radiation was received after Shot Wahoo. There was apparently no correlation of dose-rate data with the size-versus-time relationship of the plume. 4.1.3 Total Gamma Radiation in Adjacent Water. Determination of underwater gammaradi- ation was not successful; data was obtained only for DD 593 after Shot Umbrella. Contaminated water adjacent to the ship did not contribute significantly to the total radiation observed aboardDD 593 after Shot Umbrella. Indirect evidence suggests that, although radia- tion from the water may have affected the compartment,deck dose-rate ratios to a considerable degree at later times, the contribution of contaminated water to the total dose observed aboard the target ships was probably of little significance. 78

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