Title of article :
The GIS-based SafeAirView software for the concentration
assessment of radioactive pollutants after an accidental release
Author/Authors :
Elisa Canepa a، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Francesco DʹAlberti b، نويسنده , , Francesco DʹAmati b، نويسنده , , Giuseppe Triacchini c، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
The European Commission Joint Research Centre (JRC) in Ispra (Italy) has long been running nuclear installations for research
purposes. The Nuclear Decommissioning and Facilities Management Unit (NDFM) is responsible for the surveillance of
radioactivity levels in nuclear emergency conditions. The NDFM Unit has commissioned the implementation of a specifically
developed decision support system, which can be used for quick emergency evaluation in the case of hypothetical accident and for
emergency exercises. The requisites were to be a user-friendly software, able to quickly calculate and display values of air and
ground radioactive contamination in the complex area around JRC, following an accidental release of radioactive substances from a
JRC nuclear research installation.
The developed software, named “SafeAirView”, is an advanced implementation of GIS technology applied to an existingMS-DOS
mode dispersion model, SAFE_AIR (Simulation of Air pollution From Emissions_Above Inhomogeneous Regions). SAFE_AIR is a
numerical model which simulates transport, diffusion, and deposition of airborne pollutants emitted in the low atmosphere above
complex orography at both local and regional scale, under non-stationary and inhomogeneous emission and meteorological conditions.
SafeAirView makes use of user-friendly MS-Windows type interface which drives the dispersion model by a sequential and
continuous input–output process, allowing a real time simulation. The GIS environment allows a direct interaction with the
territory elements in which the simulation takes place, using data for the JRC Ispra region represented in geo-referenced
cartography. Furthermore it offers the possibility to relate concentrations with population distribution and other geo-referenced
maps, in a geographic view. Output concentration and deposition patterns can be plotted and/or exported.
In spite of the selected specific databases, the SafeAirView software architecture is a general structure, therefore the decision
support system could be easily modified to be applied in a region different from the JRC one.
Beside the description of SafeAirView, the present paper presents a statistical evaluation of the software, which has considered
three well known tracer experiments: Copenhagen, Indianapolis and Kincaid. The data sets related to these experiments are all
included in the so called Model Validation Kit.
Keywords :
model evaluation , GIS , Dispersion modelling , Nuclear releases
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment