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And, as is mentioned in the article, pretty pointless. A bomb can be shielded to the point of giving off less radiation than normal cargo.

That said, the eventually used a much more precise germanium-based detector that was able to identify the radiation by source. Such a detector could distinguish the decay of shielded U-235 from a shipment of bananas. I wonder how much those detectors cost...



> I wonder how much those detectors cost...

"The team then brought in one of the most sensitive portable detectors on the market, an $80,000 Ortec HPGe Detective DX-100T. Inside the unit, a 1.65-pound chunk of germanium..."


I have no idea if this is a reasonable price, but the mentioned product is a self-contained measurement system in a ruggedized enclosure with built in computer and software that identifies isotopes automatically. It is marketed to "homeland security" type agencies, so expect it to have quite a sales-margin :-)

If you'd want to be on the cheap side, there's a used Ge on eBay for $3k right now, add a HV supply anda suitable ADC card for your PC and you can go recording γ-spectra in no time, possibly on a $5k budget.

As you'll have to identify the isotopes yourself, check http://www.inl.gov/gammaray/catalogs/catalogs.shtml for reference spectra.


Hah! Odd that I remembered it was built with a ~1 1/2 lbs chunk of germanium, but glossed over the price..


Not sure if there are more robust bits of hardware about, but my experience of radiation detectors is that they are very sensitive and have to be very carefully handled. And docks tend to be fairly rough environments.




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