HOW IT WORKSIMAGING WITH X-RAYSX-rayphoton``````Electron backscatter``````CARBONIRON``````LEAD``````0``````3ALUMINUM``````(QHUJ\IURPQXFOHDUÆXRUHVFHQFH6 Electron volts``````Zinc and heavierArgon to copper``````Hydrogen to oxygen``````Fluorine to chlorine``````ÇǪǫDzÇǬdz``````Ç«ÇDz``````dzÇÇ«DZ``````Density of material``````Atomicnumber``````HIGHHIGH``````LOW``````LOW``````Suspectedcontraband``````Suspectedcontraband``````SALT COCAINE``````NaCl C 17 H 21 NO 4``````Seaports handle roughly 80 percentof worldwide trade by volume andplay a vital role in border security. Ina pilot program at the Port of Boston,scientists and engineers have designedan advanced scanner that can identifythe molecular makeup of substancesZLWKIDUPRUHVSHFLÆFLW\WKDQHYHUEHIRUHTXLFNO\GLÆHUHQWLDWLQJIRUexample, between salt and cocaine.``````7UDQVPLVVLRQ[UD\LPDJLQJX-ray photons are sentthrough an object. Its densityis determined by measuringthe number of photons thatsuccessfully pass through it.``````+LJKHQHUJ\EDFNVFDWWHULPDJLQJHigher energy x-ray photons areGHÆHFWHGRUEDFNVFDWWHUHGE\WKHobjectâs electrons and nuclei. Theresults can be used to determine theobjectâs density and its atomic number.``````&UHDWLQJD'PRGHOA scanner A bombards a truck andits cargo with high-energy x-rays.Sensors B then measure for back-scatter radiation (see âImaging WithX-Rays,â below) to create a 3-Dmodel. The truck and its contentsDUHLGHQWLÆHGE\IRXUFDWHJRULHV(right) based on average atomicnumber (the number of protons).
12+XQWLQJIRUFRQWUDEDQGAlgorithms then analyze the 3-Dmodel for atomic numbers and densi-ties that could indicate contraband,such as explosives and drugs. Suspi-cious material is further scanned bya detector C WKDWPHDVXUHVVSHFLÆFcombinations of elements based onhow much energy they release.``````CARGO
WATCHING
martin jones
(Martin Jones)
#1