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137Cs Gamma-ray detection at Summit, Greenland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Philip P. Dunphy
Affiliation:
Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire 03824, U.S.A.
Jack E. Dibb
Affiliation:
Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire 03824, U.S.A.
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Abstract

Global fall-out from atmospheric testing of thermonuclear weapons produced horizon markers corresponding to the initiation of testing in 1953 and the maximum fall-out in 1963. The radioactive isotope 137Cs associated with these events has a half-life of 30.2 years. Therefore, with the appropriate radiation detectors, this fall-out can be used as a long-term temporal indicator in glaciers and snowpack. A prototype γ-ray detector system was successfully tested and was used to make in-situ measurements of the 137Cs marker in a borehole at Summit, Greenland. The system consisted of a 7.6 cm by 7.6 cm NaI(Tl) scintillation crystal/photomultiplier detector, commercial pre-amplifier, amplifier and power supplies, and a microcomputer-based pulse-height analyzer. The measurements were made in boreholes of 25.4 cm and 12.7 cm diameter to depths of 22 m. Based on the results reported here, the γ-ray detection technique promises to be a powerful way to locate quickly horizon markers in the field.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1994

Introduction

Determining snow-accumulation rates is an obvious, but critical, component of glaciologic mass-balance studies. Glaciochemical investigations also demand knowledge of snow-accumulation rate; particularly temporal variations therein. A number of physical and chemical properties of snow (e.g. stable isotopes, soluble ionic species, dust) display annual variations that allow identification of annual increments of snow in polar and temperate snowpacks (Reference LoriusLorius and others, 1970). In practice, interpretation of any one of these “annual indicators” can be quite subjective; hence, several are often applied in any given study. In addition, ”marker horizons” of known absolute age are invaluable to corroborate and validate annual-layer counting.

Global fall-out from atmospheric testing of thermonuclear weapons has long been recognized as providing several nearly ideal event horizons corresponding to the initiation of testing in 1953-54 and the maximum in fall out in 1963 (e.g. Reference Picciotto and WilgainPicciotto and Wilgain, 1963; Reference Picciotto, Crozaz and deBreuck.Picciotto and others, 1964, Reference Picciotto, Crozaz, Arnbach and Eisner1967; Reference LoriusLorius and others, 1970; Arnbach and Dansgaard, 1970). A significant fraction of the fall out radioactivity consisted of 90Sr (half-life = 28.8 years) and 137Cs (half-life = 30.2years), so the labeled layers of snow are still readily detectable (e.g. Reference Gunten,, von, Rössler and GäggelerGunten and others, 1983; Reference Clausen and HammerClausen and Hammer, 1988; Reference DibbDibb, 1992) and should remain so for about 100 years. The accident at Chernobyl created a new 137Csilabeled layer corresponding to spring 1986 on many glaciers in the Northern Hemisphere (e.g. Reference Pourchet, Pinglot and Gascard.Pourchet and others, 1986; Reference Davidson, Harrington, Stephenson, Monaghan and SchnellDavidson and others, 1987, Reference Davidson, Harrington, Stephenson, Small, Boscoe and Gandley1989; Reference Ambach, Rehwald, Blumthaler, Eisner and BrunnerAmbach and others, 1988; Reference Haeberli, Gäggeler, Baltensperger, Jost and ShottererHaeberli and others, 1988; Reference DibbDibb, 1989; Reference Pinglot and PourchetPinglot and Pourchet, 1989).

With the possible exception of visible stratigraphy, all techniques for annual-layer counting require post-field season processing and analysis before results are available. Radiochemical analyses to locate fall-out horizons also generally have significant turn-around times. However, the radioactivity in the labeled layers of snow provide the prospect of making measurements in the field that would immediately yield the depth to two or three time lines (i.e. 1953, 1963 and 1986).

137Cs, present in bomb and Chernobyl fall-out, emits 662 ke V γ-rays that, if present in sufficient quantity, are readily observable by a variety of scintillation detectors. A down-hole γ-spectrometry “package” of the kind described below including scintillator, photomultiplier tube, pre-amplifier and heaters can be assembled and lowered into 4 or 5 in [10.1 or 12.7 cm] diameter boreholes (see also Reference Pinglot and PourchetPinglot and Pourchet, 1989). With such an instrument and a very light drill (or hand auger), the depth to the marker horizons (hence, accumulation rates) can be determined relatively rapidly at a large number of sites. Such markers could be used to determine whether the desired depth for sampling had been reached. The core recovered when creating the boreholes would be available for a variety of other analyses. Sampling of these cores could be focused on known time intervals of highest interest, reducing the amount of material that would have to be returned to the laboratory for analysis.

We have assembled and tested a prototype down-hole γ-spectrometer to measure the bomb fall-out history at Summit, Greenland. Our results indicate that such a system will allow rapid determinations of fall-out history at many sites in the Northern Hemisphere and perhaps in Antarctica.

Gamma-Ray Detection System

The γ-ray detector used for the measurements was a cylindrical thallium-activated sodium iodode (NaI(Tl)) scintillator, 7.6 cm in diameter and 7.6 cm thick. The scintillator crystal was optically coupled to a photomultiplier tube and both were enclosed in a stainless steel case. The scintillator/photomultiplier unit (model 3M3/3PSS) was obtained from the Bicron Corporation. The energy resolution of the detector, ΔΕ/Ε, was measured during calibration and testing and was found to be 6.8% at 662 keV. Here, ΔΕ is the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the photopeak.

For mechanical and thermal protection, the detector unit was enclosed in ~ 3 cm of ethafoam insulation and encased in a cylinder of plastic (12.7 cm outer diameter, 0.3 cm wall thickness) made from Lexan pipe. Since NaI (Tl) is sensitive to thermal shock and its light output depends on temperature (~0.6%°C−1), two resistive heaters were attached to the metal case of the detector. The heaters could dissipate a maximum power of 40 W and were controlled with a thermostat set to operate at a temperature of 28°C. The heater voltage was provided by a variable voltage supply. The cabling between the detector and the control/data electronics consisted of a coaxial cable for high voltage, a coaxial cable for the preamplified signal and cables for the pre-amplifier and heater power.

Figure 1 shows a functional block diagram of the detector system. The photomultiplier high voltage was provided by a Tennelec TC952 power supply, operating at a nominal voltage of 835 V. A pulse pre-amplifier (Tennelec TC145) was mounted in the detector container close to the detector to drive the long (~30m) signal cable and to minimize problems from noise pick-up in the cable. The signal pulses were shaped and amplified with a Tennelec TC246 amplifier/single-channel analyzer. The output was fed to a Nucleus PCA card, a 1024 channel pulse-height analyzer unit that plugs into the back plane of an IBM personal computer. Operation of the card and data handling were controlled with software that was packaged with the card. γ-ray spectra were accumulated for pre-set lifetimes (generally 1000 s), displayed on the computer monitor and stored on floppy disk.

Fig. 1. Block diagram of the γ-ray detector system.

To analyze the data, we used several features of the PCA software: identification of regions of interest, calculation of peak centroids, calculation of FWHMs, etc. For more extensive analysis and graphing, spread sheet software was used.

In order to monitor the stability of the detector continuously, a 109Cd source was mounted at the scintillator end of the unit. This source produces a primary γ-ray line at 88keV (Reference HeathHeath, 1964). The 88keV line was used to monitor the gain of the system, which could be adjusted with the amplifier as necessary to keep a standard energy to pulse-height relationship.

Data Acquisition

Two depth profiles of in-situ γ radioactivity were obtained at the GISP2 (Greenland Ice Sheet Project 2) deep-drilling camp at 72°34’N, 38°28’W in the summer of 1992. The first test was conducted in a hole that had been drilled in 1989. Originally, the hole had a 15.0 cm diameter but had been reamed to 25.4 cm for various logging instruments. In addition, the top 4 m of this hole had been lined with CIBA pipe to facilitate relocation and re-occupation of the hole. The second test was conducted in the hole created during recovery of a new 10.2 cm diameter firn core during the 1992 season. The hole diameter was approximately 12.7 cm.

For the first test, 1000 s counts were collected in the 1989 hole at 1.0 m intervals from 5 to 25 m on 14 May. On 15 May, the depth resolution was improved by counting at the 0.5 m intervals between 10 and 19 m. The second test was conducted while drilling was still ongoing. During the evening of 3 June, 1000 s counts were collected every meter to a depth of 10 m, then every 0.5 m to 16.5 m, which was the current depth of the hole. The following evening, the profile was continued to 22 m depth, with 0.5 m resolution to 20 m and at 1.0 m steps below. On-site examination of the spectra revealed that activity in the 137Cs window was essentially constant below 20 m and had a local maximum at 14.5 m. A longer count (4000 s) was then conducted at 14.5 m depth to confirm that the detector was in fact responding to 137Cs.

During both tests, gain stability was ensured by monitoring the position of the 88keV line from the 109Cd source included in the detector package. In addition, before and after each series of down-hole measurements, a 137Cs source was placed next to the detector and spectra were recorded to verify the location of the primary energy region of interest.

Gamma-Ray Spectra and Depth Profiles

To show the major features of the γ-ray spectra measured in the boreholes, we use only the data from the 12.7 cm diameter borehole. The spectra from the 25.4 cm diameter borehole are similar but the signal produced by the 137Cs deposition is somewhat smaller because of the increased distance between source and detector. Figure 2 shows γ-ray spectra accumulated at three different depths in the 12.7 cm diameter borehole: 1.0, 14.5 and 22.0 m. The spectrum at 1.0 m has three low-energy peaks due to the 109Cdsource at 23keV (109Ag X-ray), 60keV (X-ray escape peak) and 88keV (primary peak) (Reference HeathHeath, 1964). A relatively weak peak at 266 ± 8 keV from the 109Cd source may be due to a 257 keV de-excitation γ-ray from an isomeric state in the 109Ag daughter (Reference Brandi, Engelmann, Hepp, Kluge and KrehbielBrandi and others, 1964). There is also a strong continuum, which dominates the spectrum at energies above 100 keV, and a peak at 519±13keV. We associate the continuum spectrum and the peak with cosmic-ray background (see discussion below). No significant contribution from 137Cs at 662 keV is seen at this depth.

Fig. 2. Gamma-ray count spectra (2.7keV channel width) accumulated for 1000s at three different depths in the Summit borehole; the upper panel shows spectrum at 1 m, the center panel shows spectrum at 14.5 m and the lower panel shows spectrum at 22 m. Logarithmic scales on righthand side refer to the spectra plotted as a solid line; linear scales on lefthand side refer to spectra plotted as a dashed line. Sources of important features in the spectra are identified.

The spectrum at 14.5 m was accumulated at a depth at which we expect the greatest contribution from 137Cs, based on a β-particle counting analysis of an ice core from a nearby borehole (Reference DibbDibb, 1992). In fact, a peak at 675 ± 20 keV with a counting rate of 0.090 ± 0.008 s−1 is present in a 4000 s spectrum taken at this depth. The continuum is lower than that in the 1.0 m spectrum by a factor of ~4 (in the 132-211 keV range), and the peak near 519 keV is no longer present. Finally, the spectrum at 22.0 m shows only a weak continuum and the peaks from 109Cd.

In order to evaluate possible sources of the spectral features, we plot the depth profiles of counting rates for interesting energy ranges (Fig. 3). The depth profiles have been fitted with a four-parameter model consisting of an exponential, a constant and a normalized profile based on β-activity measurements by Dibb (1992) of an ice core from Summit, Greenland. The exponential component is most likely caused by cosmic-ray-produced γ-rays. The constant component is due to the 109 Cd calibration source and, possibly, a much weaker contribution from intrinsic radioactivity in the detector materials. The β-activity Profile (see Fig. 4), since it is primarily due to 137Cs and 90Sr deposition, is expected to have the same depth-dependence as γ-rays from 137Cs. The β-profile was smoothed with a linear-chapeau filter to match the coarser position resolution of the γ-ray detector. (The position resolution is broadened by the transmission of the γ-rays through the firn, which has an attenuation length of about 20 cm.) The β-profile was shifted down in depth by 1.6 m to fit the data better. This shift is accounted for by snowfall in the 3 years between the core sampling and the γ-ray measurements. So the model of the γ-ray counting rate as a function of depth, R(d), can be written as

where d is the depth in meters, fβ(d) is the smoothed and shifted β-activity as a function of depth and a1 - a4are the four free parameters.

Fig. 3. Counting rate-depth profiles in the Summit borehole for four energy ranges. A significant component from the “bomb-layer” is present in the range that contains the 137Cs 662 keVphotopeak (c) and a range where 137Cs γ-rays from Compton scattering are expected (b).

Figure 3a shows the depth-dependence of the counting rate in the energy range (63-130 keV) that contains the 88 keV 109Cd peak. The error bars were calculated from Poisson counting statistics (i.e.

, where n is the number of counts and t is the accumulation time). Most of the counting rate in the 109Cd peak region is due to the 109Cd source itself (~166s−1), but there is a component with approximately exponential depth-dependence that is caused by the underlying continuum. The scatter in the data points, which is greater than what is expected from counting statistics, is caused by detector-gain changes. In this and the following plots, a small number of outliers due to substantial gain changes have been removed.

Figure 3c shows the depth profile in the 576-742 keV energy range, which includes the 662 keV 137Cs peak. In addition to an exponential decrease with depth and a small constant rate, a significant component with the same profile as the β-activity is present. Therefore, we identify this component with 137Cs deposited during the era of above-ground nuclear bomb testing. The significance of the contribution of the bomb layer to the profile can be quantified with the “F test” statistic (Reference BevingtonBevington, 1969). Applying this test, we find that this contribution is significant with a probability exceeding 99.9%.

In Figure 3d, we plot the depth profile of an energy range (793-1032 keV) above the l37Cs peak. Here, the fall-out component is not significant. This strengthens the conclusion that the “bomb-test profile” is caused by 137Cs deposition, since it is absent in an energy range where the 137Cs emission will have no effect. In contrast, an energy range below 662 keV (415—576 keV) plotted in Figure 3b does show a significant bomb-test component. This is due to γ-rays from the 662 keV line that are Compton scattered to lower energies, both in the firn and in the detector.

We summarize the data on the depth profiles for various energies in Table 1. The table lists the model parameters from “least-squares” fits to the depth profiles. Ako shown is the reduced χ-squared 2) per degree of freedom for each fit. The exponential depth-dependence has an e-folding depth of ~3 m at all energy ranges. This continuum spectrum is probably caused by electromagnetic “showers” from cosmic rays interacting in the firn. The e-folding depth of 3 m corresponds to 150g cm−2 of water for a firn density of 500 kg m−3. This is in reasonable agreement with the e-folding depth of ~ 180 g cm−2 for cosmic-ray-produced γ-rays in the atmosphere (Reference PetersonPeterson, 1963; Reference Ryan, Jennings, Radwin, Zych and WhiteRyan and others, 1979). This comparison should be valid, since the nuclear and 7-ray interaction properties of air and water are similar when expressed in units of mass thickness, such as g cm−2 (Reference ZombeckZombeck, 1990; Particle Data Group, 1992). The cosmic-ray origin of this background is further supported by the presence of a peak at 519 ± 13 keV with an e-folding depth of 2.9 m in the borehole spectra. This line is probably the 511 keV positron-annihilation line, which is also a prominent feature of the atmospheric γ-ray spectrum, where it has an e-folding depth of 185g cm−2 (Reference PetersonPeterson, 1963). The constant term in the model could be due to intrinsic activity in the detector itself, in addition to the 109Cd calibration source. The “hard” component of the cosmic rays, which has a much larger e-folding depth than the total component (e.g. Reference HayakawaHayakawa, 1969), could also contribute to this term.

Table 1. Parameters for fits to depth profiles

Discussion and Conclusions

The foregoing dissection of individual γ-ray spectra and examination of the depth-dependence of the response of the down-hole γ-spectrometry package provides a high level of confidence that the observed response in the 137Cs window is in fact due to bomb fall-out. The underlying continuum is reasonably well understood and well represented by an exponential decay function and a constant (Table 1). Subtraction of these components from the measured activity in the 137Cs window (576-742 keV) at each depth yields residuals which reflect the bomb fall-out history at the Summit site (Fig. 4).

Fig. 4. Upper panel shows β-activity profile measured by Dibb (1992) in an ice core from Summit, Greenland (dashed line) and smoothed profile using a seven-point linear-chapeau filter (solid line). Years of some significant changes in fall-out from nuclear weapons testing are indicated. Lower-panel data points show residual counting rate in the γ-ray energy range (576-742 keV) containing the 137Cs photopeak after the exponential and constant components are subtracted from the total rate. The solid line is the smoothed ß-activity profile from the upper panel.

Figure 4 reproduces the detailed /З-activity profile measured on a core collected in 1989 (Reference DibbDibb, 1992) and the results of smoothing this record with a seven-point linear-chapeau filter. (This smoothed record is also fp(d), discussed above.) When the residual 137Cs activity is superimposed on the smoothed beta record (with a 1.6 m depth offset to account for snow accumulation between 1989 and 1992), the agreement is striking. In particular, the in-situ 7-activity measurements capture the sudden onset of artificial radioactivity in the early 1950s, the decrease during the bilateral test moratorium (1959-61) and the sharp maximum in fall-out in 1963. There is also an indication of increased 137Cs activity near 10 m depth, apparently reflecting French and Chinese atmospheric tests in the late 1960s and early 1970s, although this signal appears to be slightly offset (no more than 1 m) from the correlative peaks in the smoothed /3-activity profile.

It must be pointed out that the detailed β-activity profile in Figure 4 includes 146 points, with a sampling interval of 10 cm in the depth range where the fall-out peaks are encountered. Analysis of these samples required nearly 3 months of counting time alone. In contrast, the entire in-situ γ-activity profile was collected in 35 000 s (just under 10h). Despite some loss of depth resolution, the in-situ γ-ray measurements clearly provide nearly real-time access to several absolute time horizons in firn on the Greenland ice sheet.

Since we do not expect Greenland to be especially favored as a site of fall-out depositions, the in-situ technique should be useful, in general, on glaciers in the Northern Hemisphere. However, its feasibility in the Southern Hemisphere, and in Antarctica in particular, is not as clear. Based on the report by Dibb and others (1990) of radioactivity in the snowpack at the South Pole, we calculate that about 100 counts from 137Cs would be measured by a 10 cm by 10 cm NaI(Tl) γ-ray detector in 1 h at the depth of the bomb fall-out maximum. The significance of such a measurement would depend, of course, on the background radiation at the site but this application certainly seems to be worth testing.

The Chernobyl marker has already been measured in situ on a glacier in the French Alps by Reference Pinglot and PourchetPinglot and Pourchet (1989). The signal from 137Cs at this location varied markedly among boreholes separated by 500 m or less. In some boreholes, the signal was clearly observed within a counting time of 300 s; in others, it was not significant. Since the Chernobyl deposition is also known to be highly variable over larger areas (e.g. Reference DibbDibb, 1989), its reliability as a marker depends strongly on location.

Acknowledgenments

The authors thank E. Chupp and P. Mayewski for the advice and encouragement that lead to this work. Thanks also go to high-school students J. Scott and S. Solari, who helped with data analysis in conjunction with Project SMART (Science and Mathematics Achievement through Research Training), at the University of New Hampshire. This research was supported in part by the U.S. National Science Foundation Division of Polar Programs and the GISP2 Science Management Office, and by NASA through grant NAGW-2005. This paper is contribution 92-06 of the Greenland Ice Sheet Project 2 (GISP2).

The accuracy of references in the text and in this list is the responsibility of the authors, to whom queries should be addressed

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Block diagram of the γ-ray detector system.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Gamma-ray count spectra (2.7keV channel width) accumulated for 1000s at three different depths in the Summit borehole; the upper panel shows spectrum at 1 m, the center panel shows spectrum at 14.5 m and the lower panel shows spectrum at 22 m. Logarithmic scales on righthand side refer to the spectra plotted as a solid line; linear scales on lefthand side refer to spectra plotted as a dashed line. Sources of important features in the spectra are identified.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Counting rate-depth profiles in the Summit borehole for four energy ranges. A significant component from the “bomb-layer” is present in the range that contains the 137Cs 662 keVphotopeak (c) and a range where 137Cs γ-rays from Compton scattering are expected (b).

Figure 3

Table 1. Parameters for fits to depth profiles

Figure 4

Fig. 4. Upper panel shows β-activity profile measured by Dibb (1992) in an ice core from Summit, Greenland (dashed line) and smoothed profile using a seven-point linear-chapeau filter (solid line). Years of some significant changes in fall-out from nuclear weapons testing are indicated. Lower-panel data points show residual counting rate in the γ-ray energy range (576-742 keV) containing the 137Cs photopeak after the exponential and constant components are subtracted from the total rate. The solid line is the smoothed ß-activity profile from the upper panel.