6 research outputs found
Concentrator of laser energy for thin vapour cloud production near a surface
A novel scheme is presented for production of a thin ( mm) uniform vapor
layer over a large surface area ( cm) by pulsed laser ablation of a
solid surface. Instead of dispersing the laser energy uniformly over the
surface, a modified Fabry-Perot interferometer is employed to concentrate the
laser energy in very narrow closely-spaced concentric rings. This approach may
be optimized to minimum total laser energy for the desired vapor density.
Furthermore, since the vapor is produced from a small fraction of the total
surface area, the local ablation depth is large, which minimized the fraction
of surface contamination in the vapor.
Key words: laser evaporation, thin gas layer formation.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
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Utilization of the atmospheric release advisory capability (ARAC) services during and after the Three Mile Island accident
At 0820 PST on 28 March 1979, the Department of Energy's Emergency Operations Center advised the Atmospheric Release Advisory Capability (ARAC) that the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, had experienced an accident some four hours earlier, resulting in the atmospheric release of xenon-133 and krypton-88. This report describes ARAC's response to the Three Mile Island accident, including the role ARAC played throughout the 20 days that real-time assessments were made available to the Department of Energy on-scene commander. It also describes the follow-up population-dose calculations performed for the President's Commission on Three Mile Island. At the request of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, a questionnaire addressing the usefulness of ARAC products during the accident was sent to ARAC-product users. A summary of the findings from this questionnaire, along with recommendations for improving ARAC service, is also presented. The accident at Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, is discussed in the context of a well-planned emergency response by local and Federal officials