HomeMy WebLinkAbout55- Public Comments Annex A
Simulated RDD attack at Langley AFB, VA
Notional RDD Scenario
The date is I March 1999. A terrorist group is planning to use an RDD attack against
Langley AFB, VA. The terrorists have stolen a spent fuel rod from nearby North Ahna
nuclear power plant. They gain access to the base using a stolen identification card, and
are driving a rental truck full of two tons of fertilizer and diesel fuel, and have packed the
spent fuel rod in the middle of the explosive mixture. They park in the wing headquarters
parking lot, exit the base using a previously placed getaway vehicle, and set the bomb to
explode at high noon.
Hazard Prediction Assessment Code (HPAC) Simulation Software
Overview
HPAC is a forward deployable, counter-proliferation/counter-force
capability available for government, government-related or academic use.
This software tool assists warfighters in weaponeering targets containing
weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and in emergency response to
hazardous agent releases. Its fast-running, physics-based algorithms
enable users to model and predict hazard areas and human collateral
effects in minutes.
HPAC provides the capability to accurately predict the effects of
hazardous material releases into the atmosphere and its impact on civilian
and military populations. The software uses integrated source terms,high- p
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SS
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resolution weather forecasts and particulate transport to model hazard
areas produced by battlefield or terrorist weapons of mass destruction
(WMD) use, conventional counterforce attacks against WMD facilities, or
military and industrial accidents. One of HPAC's strengths is fast access
to real-time weather data via Meteorological Data Servers (MDS). HPAC
also has embedded climatology or historical weather for use when real
weather is not available.
HPAC models all nuclear, biological, and chemical (NBC) collateral
effects of concern to military operations. These may derive from the use
of NBC weapons or from conventional weapon strikes against production
and storage facilities for such weapons. Similar effects may result from
military or industrial accidents. HPAC provides source information on
potential radioactive releases from nuclear weapons or reactor accidents
and has the capability to generate source terms for nuclear, chemical and
biological weapon strikes or accidental releases.
HPAC includes the SCIPUFF model for turbulent transport, a new and
advanced technology that provides a highly efficient and accurate
prediction for a wide range of hazard scenarios. HPAC can also help C_i
answer the question -- "How good is the prediction?" -- providing
probabilistic solutions to the atmospheric transport problem. HPAC or
MEA builds source terms for hazardous incidents for input to the
atmospheric transport model, SCIPUFF. The current code hosts operator-
friendly "incident" setup capability for nuclear, biological, and chemical
releases resulting from either weapon deployment or facility attack.
Sample HPAC projects are provided which may be edited to suit a wide
range of user requirements or incidents. Additional improvements in the
software are planned, but user feedback will ensure that these
improvements include a user's perspective,not just a scientist's.
Assumptions and Data
The following assumptions and data were used and/or entered as variables into the
HPAC simulation software:
• I spent fuel rod(mass= 10.72 kg) from the North Anna power plant(reactor power
2893 megawatts)
4000 pounds of High Explosives
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• Altitude of incident: ground level
• Location of incident Langley AFB, VA
• Time of incident: March 1, 1999 at 12:00 noon (local time)
• HPAC software utilized historical weather data for temperature and winds
• The simulation was terminated after an estimated 12 hours after the scenario, due to
the operator's opinion that further radiological dispersion was negligible.2
Simulation Outputs
The following plots show potential radioactive material dispersion patterns and give
an estimate of the total radiation dosage in rems that a person would receive if they
remained on the surface with no protection for the entire time period given.3 An acute
whole body dose of 450-500 rems would cause approximately 50%of people to die
within 30 days.°
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10.72 kg spent nuclear fuel at Langley AFB
Historical Weather
Total effective eq. at 02-Mar-99 17:00Z (24.0 hrs)
20.0
14.0
rem
8.0 600.0
Y 450.0
}
2.0 150.0
50.0
-4.0 5.00
0.500
-10.0
-10.0 -4.0 2.0 8.0 14.0 20.0
X(km)
5km
Figure 1 RDD Local Effects
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10.72 kg spent nuclear fuel at Langley AFB
Historical Weather
Total effective eq. at 02-Mar-99 17:OOZ (24.0 hrs)
632.4
ClerElan r ,„145`�. e�
III tlsbur9n
379.5 Pnilatleipnie w
y.
` assington Dc, - rem
126.5 .p ''' 0000
E ; 4 450.0
> 7;
-126.5 rte' 150.0
y
50.0
-379.5 500
$ 0.500
-632.4
-635.1 -381.1 -127.0 127.0 381.1 635.1
X(km)
200km
Figure 2 RDD Regional Effects
Notes
Amico, Ross, Defense Threat Reduction Agency, personal correspondence, 11
March 1999
2 /bid.
/bid
Turner, James "Atoms, Radiation, and Radiation Protection," Pergamon Press,
1986,p. 229
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Glossary
AFRAT Air Force Radiation Assessment Team
AMS Aerial Measuring System
ARAC Atmospheric Release Advisory Capability
ARG Accident Response Group
CALIOPE Chemical Analysis by Laser interrogation of Proliferation
Effluents
CBIRF Chemical and Biological Incident Response Force
DoD Department of Defense
DoE Department of Energy
EOD Explosive Ordinance Disposal
FBI Federal Bureau of Investigation
FEMA Federal Emergency Management Agency
FRMAC Federal Radiological Monitoring and Assessment Center
FSU Former Soviet Union
HPAC Hazard Prediction Assessment Code
HEU Highly Enriched Uranium
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency
IND Improvised nuclear device
NBC Nuclear(Radiological),Biological or Chemical
NEST Nuclear Emergency Search Team
PDD Presidential Decision Directive
PSYOPS Psychological Operations
Pu Plutonium
RAP Radiological Assistance Program
RADCON Radiation control
RDD Radiological dispersion device
RDW Radiological dispersion weapon
REACITS Radiation Emergency Assistance Center/Training Site
START Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty
TNT Trinitrotoluene
U Uranium
USAF United States Air Force
WATS Wide-Area Tracking System
WMD Weapons of Mass Destruction
Consequence Management: Measures to protect public health and safety, restore
essential government services, and provide� relief to���vrd 9n rnGklJUi�n G°
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