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In the nuclear explosion monitoring context, what is an anomaly?
by
Burnett, Jonathan L.
, Kalinowski, Martin B.
, Miley, Harry S.
, Lowrey, Justin D.
, Hayes, James C.
, Ungar, R. Kurt
, McIntyre, Justin I.
, Cooper, Matthew W.
, Schrom, Brian T.
, Bowyer, Ted W.
, Haas, Derek A.
, Foxe, Michael P.
, Eslinger, Paul W.
, Saey, Paul R. J.
in
Aerosols
/ Arms control
/ Chemistry
/ Chemistry and Materials Science
/ Diagnostic Radiology
/ Explosions
/ Hadrons
/ Heavy Ions
/ Industrial plant emissions
/ Inorganic Chemistry
/ Isotopes
/ Monitoring
/ Monitoring systems
/ Network management systems
/ Nuclear Chemistry
/ Nuclear energy
/ Nuclear explosions
/ Nuclear Physics
/ Nuclear power plants
/ Nuclear tests
/ Physical Chemistry
/ Radioactivity
/ Radioisotopes
/ Reactors
/ Verification
/ Xenon
2024
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In the nuclear explosion monitoring context, what is an anomaly?
by
Burnett, Jonathan L.
, Kalinowski, Martin B.
, Miley, Harry S.
, Lowrey, Justin D.
, Hayes, James C.
, Ungar, R. Kurt
, McIntyre, Justin I.
, Cooper, Matthew W.
, Schrom, Brian T.
, Bowyer, Ted W.
, Haas, Derek A.
, Foxe, Michael P.
, Eslinger, Paul W.
, Saey, Paul R. J.
in
Aerosols
/ Arms control
/ Chemistry
/ Chemistry and Materials Science
/ Diagnostic Radiology
/ Explosions
/ Hadrons
/ Heavy Ions
/ Industrial plant emissions
/ Inorganic Chemistry
/ Isotopes
/ Monitoring
/ Monitoring systems
/ Network management systems
/ Nuclear Chemistry
/ Nuclear energy
/ Nuclear explosions
/ Nuclear Physics
/ Nuclear power plants
/ Nuclear tests
/ Physical Chemistry
/ Radioactivity
/ Radioisotopes
/ Reactors
/ Verification
/ Xenon
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
In the nuclear explosion monitoring context, what is an anomaly?
by
Burnett, Jonathan L.
, Kalinowski, Martin B.
, Miley, Harry S.
, Lowrey, Justin D.
, Hayes, James C.
, Ungar, R. Kurt
, McIntyre, Justin I.
, Cooper, Matthew W.
, Schrom, Brian T.
, Bowyer, Ted W.
, Haas, Derek A.
, Foxe, Michael P.
, Eslinger, Paul W.
, Saey, Paul R. J.
in
Aerosols
/ Arms control
/ Chemistry
/ Chemistry and Materials Science
/ Diagnostic Radiology
/ Explosions
/ Hadrons
/ Heavy Ions
/ Industrial plant emissions
/ Inorganic Chemistry
/ Isotopes
/ Monitoring
/ Monitoring systems
/ Network management systems
/ Nuclear Chemistry
/ Nuclear energy
/ Nuclear explosions
/ Nuclear Physics
/ Nuclear power plants
/ Nuclear tests
/ Physical Chemistry
/ Radioactivity
/ Radioisotopes
/ Reactors
/ Verification
/ Xenon
2024
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In the nuclear explosion monitoring context, what is an anomaly?
Journal Article
In the nuclear explosion monitoring context, what is an anomaly?
2024
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Overview
In the early years of nuclear explosion monitoring, experts used downwind detections with meaningful ratios of radioactive species to identify an explosion. Today’s reality is sparse networks of radionuclide monitoring stations looking for weak signals. Analysts need to discriminate between industrial background radioactivity and nuclear explosion signals, even using the detection of one isotope. Aerosol and xenon measurements potentially related to nuclear tests in 2006 and 2013 announced by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and from worldwide civilian background radioactivity are considered when defining radionuclide detection anomalies to objectively guide the use of limited analyst resources and reduce the possibility of not detecting nuclear explosions.
Publisher
Springer International Publishing,Springer,Springer Nature B.V,Springer Science + Business Media
Subject
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