The Committee on Dosimetry for the Radiation Effects Research Foundation (RERF) was set up more than a decade ago at the request of the U.S. Department of Energy. It was charged with monitoring work and experimental results related to the Dosimetry System 1986 (DS86) used by RERF to reconstruct the radiation doses to the survivors in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. At the time it was established, DS86 was believed to be the best available dosimetric system for RERF, but questions have persisted about some features, especially the estimates of neutrons resulting from the Hiroshima bomb. This book describes the current situation, the gamma-ray dosimetry, and such dosimetry issues as thermal-neutron discrepancies between measurement and calculation at various distances in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It recommends approaches to bring those issues to closure and sets the stage for the recently convened U.S. and Japan Working Groups that will develop a new dosimetry for RERF.
The book outlines the changes relating to DS86 in the past 15 years, such as improved numbers that go into, and are part of, more sophisticated calculations for determining the radiations from bombs that reach certain distances in air, and encourages incorporation of the changes into a revised dosimetry system.
Table of Contents
Front Matter
Executive Summary
1. Introduction
2. Gamma-Ray Measurements
3. Thermal-Neutron and Fast-Neutron Measurements
4. Radiation Transport Calculations
5. Biological Dosimetry at RERF
6. Uncertainty in DS86
7. Implications for Risk Assessment
8. Conclusions and Recommendations
Appendix A: The RERF Dosimetry Measurements Database and Data Collection for the Dosimetry Reassessment
Appendix B: An Uncertainty Analysis of Neutron Activation Measurements in Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Appendix C: Cosmic-ray Neutron Contribution to Sample Activation
Appendix D: Letter from Committee on Dosimetry to DOE
Glossary
References
Biosketches