Reconstructing the Atomic Number of Cargo X-ray Images using Dual Energy Radiography

To combat the risk of nuclear smuggling, the U.S. deploys scanning systems at ports of entry. Radiation portal monitors are capable of identifying unshielded nuclear or radiological threats by detecting radiation that is passively being emitted from a container. Radiography systems offer complementa...

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Main Author: Lalor, Peter
Other Authors: Danagoulian, Areg
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2024
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/155593
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author Lalor, Peter
author2 Danagoulian, Areg
author_facet Danagoulian, Areg
Lalor, Peter
author_sort Lalor, Peter
collection MIT
description To combat the risk of nuclear smuggling, the U.S. deploys scanning systems at ports of entry. Radiation portal monitors are capable of identifying unshielded nuclear or radiological threats by detecting radiation that is passively being emitted from a container. Radiography systems offer complementary detection capabilities, capable of identifying large, dense objects, such as a heavily shielded nuclear warhead. However, this analysis reveals that a smuggler might be able to evade detection from both passive scanning systems and radiography using a lightly shielded nuclear threat. One avenue to improve the capability to identify concealed illicit materials is through dual energy radiographic systems, which enable a rough elemental analysis of cargo contents due to the atomic number dependence of photon attenuation. This work investigates the capabilities and limitations for atomic number discrimination using dual energy MeV systems, finding that different materials can sometimes produce identical photon transparency measurements. This degeneracy introduces a fundamental ambiguity when differentiating between materials of different atomic numbers, even in systems with perfect resolution and no statistical noise. Despite these limitations, we describe a new and more precise method for approximating the atomic number of radiographic images by introducing a semiempirical transparency model. By incorporating a simple calibration step, this model captures second-order effects such as bulk scattering and uncertainties in the source energy spectrum and the detector response function. This methodology was benchmarked using both Monte Carlo simulations and experimental measurements from commercial scanning systems, demonstrating the ability to obtain accurate material predictions on noisy input images by incorporating an image segmentation step. Furthermore, we show that this approach can be adapted to identify shielded objects using a two-pass procedure.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1555932024-07-11T03:34:10Z Reconstructing the Atomic Number of Cargo X-ray Images using Dual Energy Radiography Lalor, Peter Danagoulian, Areg Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for Computational Science and Engineering To combat the risk of nuclear smuggling, the U.S. deploys scanning systems at ports of entry. Radiation portal monitors are capable of identifying unshielded nuclear or radiological threats by detecting radiation that is passively being emitted from a container. Radiography systems offer complementary detection capabilities, capable of identifying large, dense objects, such as a heavily shielded nuclear warhead. However, this analysis reveals that a smuggler might be able to evade detection from both passive scanning systems and radiography using a lightly shielded nuclear threat. One avenue to improve the capability to identify concealed illicit materials is through dual energy radiographic systems, which enable a rough elemental analysis of cargo contents due to the atomic number dependence of photon attenuation. This work investigates the capabilities and limitations for atomic number discrimination using dual energy MeV systems, finding that different materials can sometimes produce identical photon transparency measurements. This degeneracy introduces a fundamental ambiguity when differentiating between materials of different atomic numbers, even in systems with perfect resolution and no statistical noise. Despite these limitations, we describe a new and more precise method for approximating the atomic number of radiographic images by introducing a semiempirical transparency model. By incorporating a simple calibration step, this model captures second-order effects such as bulk scattering and uncertainties in the source energy spectrum and the detector response function. This methodology was benchmarked using both Monte Carlo simulations and experimental measurements from commercial scanning systems, demonstrating the ability to obtain accurate material predictions on noisy input images by incorporating an image segmentation step. Furthermore, we show that this approach can be adapted to identify shielded objects using a two-pass procedure. Ph.D. 2024-07-10T20:17:06Z 2024-07-10T20:17:06Z 2024-05 2024-06-13T16:26:34.427Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/155593 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright retained by author(s) https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Lalor, Peter
Reconstructing the Atomic Number of Cargo X-ray Images using Dual Energy Radiography
title Reconstructing the Atomic Number of Cargo X-ray Images using Dual Energy Radiography
title_full Reconstructing the Atomic Number of Cargo X-ray Images using Dual Energy Radiography
title_fullStr Reconstructing the Atomic Number of Cargo X-ray Images using Dual Energy Radiography
title_full_unstemmed Reconstructing the Atomic Number of Cargo X-ray Images using Dual Energy Radiography
title_short Reconstructing the Atomic Number of Cargo X-ray Images using Dual Energy Radiography
title_sort reconstructing the atomic number of cargo x ray images using dual energy radiography
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/155593
work_keys_str_mv AT lalorpeter reconstructingtheatomicnumberofcargoxrayimagesusingdualenergyradiography