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EVALUATING EMERGENCY RESPONSE MODELS OF RADIOLOGICAL DISPERSION IN COMPLEX TERRAIN

L.L. Dyer ; Safety and Radiation Services, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, Sydney, Australia
J.H. Pascoe ; Safety and Radiation Services, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, Sydney, Australia


Puni tekst: engleski pdf 196 Kb

str. 93-97

preuzimanja: 647

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Sažetak

Operational airborne releases of trace quantities of the radioactive noble gas Ar-41 from the HIFAR Nuclear Research
Reactor located in Sydney, Australia are valuable for evaluating emergency response models incorporating radiological dispersion.
The Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO), where the reactor is located, has a network of
meteorological stations and GR-150 environmental gamma dose detectors placed in complex terrain within a 5km radius of the site.
The current version of ANSTO’s Emergency Response System feeds real-time meteorological data from this network into the wind
field model NUATMOS, which is then subsequently used, together with known source emissions of Ar-41 from HIFAR, to drive
the Lagrangian mesoscale atmospheric dispersion puff model RIMPUFF. Output from RIMPUFF is compared with data from the
gamma dose monitoring network in order to assess the overall performance of the system.
An updated model combination LSMC/RIMPUFF has recently been evaluated using Ar-41 peak observations from the detector
network during 2002-03 under a range of atmospheric stability conditions. Sensitivity tests of the new model version were
performed by perturbing the gridded meteorological data within the model domain, which incorporates complex terrain. Results
from statistical analyses of the model output are reported, assessing the suitability of LSMC/RIMPUFF to replace the current
models in the Emergency Response System.
The LSMC/RIMPUFF evaluation results are compared with two previous evaluations carried out in 2004, of LSMC’s predecessor
LINCOM/RIMPUFF and the NUATMOS/RIMPUFF combination currently used at ANSTO. Results from these tests have been
favourable for LSMC/RIMPUFF, which is consequently now likely to replace the older models within ANSTO’s Emergency
Response System. The decision support system ARGOS, which also incorporates the LSMC/RIMPUFF model, is currently being
evaluated for potential use by a number of Organisations within Australia including ANSTO. Some results of this initial evaluation
will also be included here.

Ključne riječi

model evaluation; atmospheric dispersion models; gamma monitoring system; emergency response system

Hrčak ID:

64170

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/64170

Datum izdavanja:

12.12.2008.

Posjeta: 1.081 *