December 1, 2005
Journal Article

Point Source Detection and Characterization for Vehicle Radiation Portal Monitors

Abstract

Many international border crossings presently screen cargo for illicit nuclear material using radiation portal monitors that measure the gamma ray and/or neutron flux emitted by vehicles. The fact that many target sources have a point-like geometry can be exploited to detect sub-threshold sources and filter out benign sources that frequently possess a distributed geometry. This report describes a two-step process, which has the potential to complement other alarm algorithms, for detecting and characterizing point sources. The first step applies a matched filter whereas step two uses maximum likelihood estimation. In a base-case simulation, matched filtering detected a 250-cps source injected onto a white-noise background at a 95-percent detection probability and a 0.003 false alarm probability. For the same simulation, the probability of success for the maximum likelihood estimation technique performed well at source strengths of 250 and 400 cps. These simulations provided a best-case feasibility study for this technique, which will be extended to experimental data that possess false point-source signatures resulting from background shielding caused by vehicle design and cargo distribution.

Revised: March 7, 2006 | Published: December 1, 2005

Citation

Runkle R.C., T.M. Mercier, K.K. Anderson, and D.K. Carlson. 2005. Point Source Detection and Characterization for Vehicle Radiation Portal Monitors. IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science 52, no. 6 PT 2:3020-3025. PNNL-SA-44882.