Paper
1 October 1999 Nitrogen camera: detection of antipersonnel mines revisited
A. K.A. McEntee, Edward A. Knapp, Robert B. Moler, Anna W. Saunders, W. Peter Trower
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Abstract
We have previously reported on a nuclear technique, the Nitrogen Camera, that has produced images of elemental nitrogen in concentrations and with surface densities typical of buried plastic anti-personnel mines. Since then we have been developing (1) enabling technologies, with most important of which is a mobile 70 MeV light source; (2) computer simulations to determine detection sensitivities with burial depth, explosives content, detector configurations, etc; and (3) deployment practices for both humanitarian and military field operations. Here we review the technique and summarize the state of the implementation.
© (1999) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
A. K.A. McEntee, Edward A. Knapp, Robert B. Moler, Anna W. Saunders, and W. Peter Trower "Nitrogen camera: detection of antipersonnel mines revisited", Proc. SPIE 3769, Penetrating Radiation Systems and Applications, (1 October 1999); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.363674
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KEYWORDS
Nitrogen

Photons

Explosives

Carbon

Land mines

Cameras

Sensors

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