The invention relates to a method for detecting a moving radioactive source and the associated device.
The invention has applications in many fields and, particularly advantageously, in the safety field.
For safety reasons, it is often necessary to detect the possible passage of a radioactive source in the vicinity of a place where an industrial process is taking place or during the supervision of an infrastructure.
The detection sensitivity of a radioactive source depends on the radioactive environment level (background noise), the source intensity, and the passage time of this source in front of the detection system. It is known to adjust an alarm threshold with respect to the level of statistical fluctuations in the radioactive environment in order to trigger a signal which proves the presence of a radioactive source.
Systems for detecting moving sources comprise a plurality of measuring channels. Some of these systems perform the detection of mobile sources by thresholding each measuring channel and measuring, by gross summation, signals delivered by the different measuring channels at the time of detection. In order to reduce the false alarm rates, systems which work based on an independent detection of each measuring channel and on an a posteriori detection correlation (cf. “Distributed detection of a nuclear radioactive source using fusion correlation decisions” A. Sundaresan, P. K. Varshney, N. S. V Rao in Proceeding of the International Conference on Information Fusion, 2007). If this approach indeed enables a reduction of false alarm rates, it does not suppress the conventional thresholding step which limits the intrinsic detection capacities of detectors.
The invention does not have this drawback.
Indeed, the invention relates to a method for detecting a radioactive source moving on a linear path substantially parallel to an alignment of N detectors, N being an integer equal to or greater than 2. The method comprises the following steps:
Nt being a very large integer ahead of N,
As mentioned above, the number NR of correlation products is given by the equation:
where N is the number of detectors and Nt the number of sets of N signals simultaneously detected by the N detectors over a same duration Δt. The numbers NR, Nt, and N are all integers. It is consequently clear that, for a given number N of detectors, the number Nt is chosen so that NR is also an integer. By way of non-limiting example, for a number N of detectors equal to 10, the number Nt can be equal to 10000, which induces a number NR equal to 1111.
It also appears from the formula of the correlation product RZ that all the measurements performed over the duration Δt are not used to compute the product RZ. It is an advantage of the invention not to use all the performed measurements, but only the measurements useful for forming the desired result.
According to an additional feature of the invention, as soon as a radioactive source is considered to have moved in front of the detectors, the speed V of the source is computed such that:
V=d/(T×Δt),
where d is the distance separating two neighbouring detectors and T is the rank t of a set of N pulse counting values for which the correlation product Rt is maximum.
According to another additional feature of the invention, as soon as a radioactive source is considered to have moved in front of the detectors, the intensity I of the source is computed so that:
In a particular embodiment of the invention, the pulse counting values are smoothed before the computing step implemented by the computer.
The invention also relates to a device for detecting a radioactive source moving over a substantially linear path, characterised in that it comprises means for implementing the method of the invention.
Other features and advantages of the invention will appear upon reading the following description, made in reference to the appended figures, among which:
The radioactive source S which is wanted to be detected moves in principle over a linear path TL (road/conveyor/etc.). The N detectors D1, D2, . . . , Di, . . . , DN of the detection device are aligned parallel to the path TL. A distance d separates two neighbouring detectors and a distance D separates each detector Di (i=1, 2, . . . N) from the path TL.
The device comprises N detectors Di (i=1, 2, . . . , N), N processing circuits Ti, N pulse counting circuits Ki, a memory block B made of N FIFO memories Mi (FIFO stands for “First In First Out”), and a computer C.
Each detector Di (i=1, 2, . . . , N) which detects an incident radiation delivers a pulse signal. The pulse signal delivered by the detector Di is then processed by a processing circuit Ti, the latter comprising, for example, an amplifier Ai and a filtering circuit Fi. Each processing circuit Ti delivers an electronic pulse. The electronic pulses delivered by a processing circuit Ti are counted by a counting circuit Ki. Counting the electronic pulses is made by successive time slots of a duration Δt. The counting values which are delivered by the counter Ki are transmitted to the FIFO memory Mi. A FIFO memory Mi consequently contains a succession of counting values Mi,1, Mi,2, . . . Mi,t, etc., where t is the time position index of the counting values in the history of the FIFO memories.
According to the known principle which governs the FIFO memories, as soon as a FIFO memory is full, the oldest counting value which is stored in the memory is extracted to enable a new counting value to be stored. The counting values which are simultaneously extracted from different memories Mi are then transmitted to the computer C. In a particular embodiment of the invention (not shown in the figure), the counting values are smoothed by a smoothing circuit before being transmitted to the FIFO memory.
The computer C implements a method for processing counting values Mi,t.
In a first step (step 1), the computer C computes NR correlation products RZ (z=1, 2, . . . , NR) such that:
RZΠi=1NM[i,(N−i)z+1]+, with
Nt being a very large integer ahead of N.
The statistical mean
Next, the standard deviation σ(
Once the standard deviation is computed, it is verified whether there is a significant correlation of the time series among the Rt values (step 4). It is thus verified whether the following inequation is performed or not:
Rz≧
where the magnitude K2 is a scalar chosen with respect to the false alarm rate desired for detection. The order of magnitude of K2 is a few units.
If the above inequation is not performed, no source is considered to have moved in front of the detectors (step 5: no source).
If the above inequation is performed, a source is considered to have moved in front of the detectors and its speed V and/or its intensity I (number of hits per second) are computed (step 6).
Among the Rt values, there is an Rt value which is maximum. Letting T be the rank t for which the Rt value is maximum, we therefore have:
V=d/(T×Δt),
where d is the distance separating two neighbouring detectors, and
As soon as the steps 5 and 6 are carried out, a new computing cycle is started (back to step 1).
The results illustrated in
τ=t×Δt
v=d/t×Δt
It can be noticed that the correlation product clearly shows a peak P at a speed substantially equal to 5 m/s.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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13 50583 | Jan 2013 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/051070 | 1/21/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/114608 | 7/31/2014 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20150346352 A1 | Dec 2015 | US |