Title: |
Distinguished R&D Staff, Detonation Forensics & Response |
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Speaker: |
Dr. Vincent Jodoin |
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Affiliation: |
Oak Ridge National Laboratory |
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When: |
Thursday, September 9, 2021 at 11:00:00 AM |
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Where: |
Boggs Building, Room https://bluejeans.com/453847249/5340 |
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Host: |
Dr. Nolan Hertel | |
Abstract The talk will review the application of DELFIC to the National Technical Nuclear Forensics interagency ground sample collection team. The collection team needed a fast running, portable mission planning tool to allow them to robustly respond to emerging nuclear device post detonation situations. DELFIC is a validated, physics-based, research reference, fallout prediction software package. It has been implemented into the Fallout Planning Tool and is used to predict the expected isotope concentration of fallout, particle sizes, fractionation ratios, dose rate and integrated dose over the planned collection routes information vital to ensure quality samples for nuclear forensic analysis while predicting dose to the sample collectors. DELFIC includes dynamic cloud rise, diffusive transport, and output processor modules. It also contains a particle activity module which models the radiochemical fractionation of the condensing elements in the cooling fireball into and onto particles to predict the activity size distribution for a given scenario. DELFICs cloud rise module produces a definition of the stabilized cloud which accounts for particle settling and advection during cloud rise which causes a physical fractionation of the particles. The use of Google Maps and Google Earth with the DELFIC Fallout Planning Tool provides a familiar, user friendly interface for mission planning and visualization. |
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Biography Dr. Vince Jodoin is currently a Distinguished RandD Staff in the Detonation Forensics and Response Group in the Nuclear Nonproliferation Division at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory ORNL. Dr. Jodoin does research in nuclear weapons effects for applications in nuclear detonation detection and consequence management. He has been at ORNL since 2005 after retiring from a 20 year career in the United States Air Force USAF as a professional military nuclear engineer, scientist, professor, research manager, and multiple program area division chief. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in Nuclear Engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1985, a Master of Science MS degree in Electrical Engineering from California State University in 1988, and both an MS and doctorate degree in Nuclear Engineering from the Air Force Institute of Technology AFIT in 1989 and 1994, respectively. He is experienced in the physics of nuclear weapons, effects of nuclear weapons, nuclear treaty monitoring, analysis of environmental samples, proliferation of nuclear weapons, teaching general physics & nuclear engineering, and directing national security research. While in the USAF he had an assignment with the Strategic Air Command and two assignments with the Air Force Technical Applications Center AFTAC and teaching assignments at both the USAF Academy as well as AFIT. After joining ORNLs Reactor Analysis Group in 2005, he created a multidisciplinary fallout research program at ORNL that capitalized on existing reactor based source term modeling expertise. It included research on the physical, chemical, and radiological properties of fallout. He developed methods to predict the fission product, actinide, and activation products following a nuclear burst. In 2009, he was |