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RE: New Detector
Jim,
Yes, RadNet is an open protocol for radiation detection instruments that
was developed at Los Alamos. A wide variety of users
and facilities are utilizing it, and it's use continues to grow as more
people see its advantages. There's no charge to use it, and since
it's an open protocol anyone can see and utilize its structures.
The RadNet protocol is not vapor-ware, nor in need of further
development, it's been working very well in the field for a fairly long
time.
The website
www.rad-net.net
has details (it'll redirect you). On that site: "Working Group Docs" - "RPM articles" there's an article that was written in 1997 that covers the basics of RadNet.
Brian Rees
Los Alamos National Laboratory
At 11:07 PM 4/18/2003 -0400, Jim Kost wrote:
I thought RadNetwas an open protocol of information for radiation detection systems that was developed for Los Alamos labs. A lot of radiation detection manufactures are now incorporating and registering their instrumentation with the RadNet group.
Jim Kost
Radiological Engineer
MGP Instruments - RADOS
Phone: (770) 432-2744 x116
Fax: (770) 432-9179
Mobile: (404) 384-1049
Web Site: www.mgpi.com and www.rados.de
-----Original Message-----
From: Elaine Marshall [mailto:emarshall@fnal.gov]
Sent: Friday, April 18, 2003 12:07 PM
To: radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu
Subject: New Detector
Found the following article in today's news.
Weapons Lab Rolls Out New Radiation Detectors
L I V E R M O R E, Calif., April 18 A cell phone that will be able to tell the difference between a "dirty bomb" and someone who's undergone radiation treatment is among the next generation of anti-terrorism tools being worked on by national weapons lab scientists.
The device, known as RadNet, is designed to make calls, surf the Web, act as a Personal Digital Assistant, pinpoint locations with Global Positioning System technology and sniff out nuclear materials with a cutting-edge sensor. It is one of several national security projects under development at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
"It almost sounds like science fiction, but it's here today," said Simon Labov, director of the new Radiation Detection Center at Lawrence Livermore, which celebrated its formal opening Thursday with a display of the RadNet and other devices.
U.S. Rep. Ellen Tauscher, D-Calif., who was at the lab for the opening and for a daylong conference of emergency response officials, called the projects "the kind of work and the kind of science that is fundamental to our being able to protect the American people from weapons of mass destruction."
Lab officials showed off their work with theatrical flair, whipping away white cloths from some prototypes.
"This is called UltraSpec," Labov said as he displayed the Ultra-High Resolution Gamma Ray and Neutron Spectrometers. "No other instrument like it in the world."
The Ultra-Spec uses extremely low temperatures within one degree of absolute zero, or -459 degrees Fahrenheit to measure gamma rays from nuclear materials that might be present in terrorist bombs and weapons. It works by recording, very precisely, the rise in temperature when a single gamma ray hits the detector's superconducting material, which is usually tin.
"At these low temperatures we get incredible sensitivity," Labov said.
Much of the technology on display Thursday uses gamma ray detection because gamma rays travel farther than other substances emitted by nuclear material and are easier to spot and identify, Labov said. Nuclear material also emits neutrons, which is part of some of the detection technology.
RadNet grabbed a lot of the attention Thursday with its small size in the range of a cellular phone circa 1995 and big agenda.
Scientists hope to have prototypes ready for testing within a few months and could have the devices ready for action in about two years.
The Associated Press
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ Elaine T. Marshall
+ Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
+ Facilities Engineering Services Section
+ Administration/Safety
+ Voice: (630 840-8756/Fax: (630) 840-4980
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