Patent ID: 9081099
Filing Date: 2015-07-14
Classification: G01T,G01V

Abstract:
1. A system for detecting special nuclear materials, comprising: an electron beam source for producing first, second and third electron beams, respectively; an electronic target for producing first, second, and third X-ray beams when the electronic target is bombarded by the first, second and third electron beams, respectively; a beam splitter configured to split the third X-ray beam produced by the electronic target into a first part and a second part; a movable photoneutron conversion target that can move between a working position and a non-working position, wherein the photoneutron conversion target is configured to operate in the non-working position when the electronic target produces the first X-ray beam, wherein the photoneutron conversion target is further configured to operate in the working position when the electronic target produces the second and third X-ray beam, and wherein the photoneutron conversion target is also configured to produce a photoneutron beam when the photoneutron conversion target is bombarded by the first part of the third X-ray, the produced photoneutron beam being used for neutron transmission detection on the object to be detected and the second part of the third X-ray beam being used for X-ray transmission detection on the object to be detected; and X/γ ray detector and neutron detector for detecting X/γ ray and neutron ray signals emitted and/or transmitted from the object to be detected; wherein the electron beam source is configured to produce the first electron beam with an energy being set such that the first X-ray beam produced by the electronic target when the electronic target is bombarded by the first electron beam enables the special nuclear materials that possibly exist in the object to be detected to undergo a photofission; wherein the electron beam source is further configured to produce the second electron beam with an energy being set such that the second X-ray beam produced by bombarding the electronic target with the second electron beam produce low energy neutrons that enable the special nuclear materials that possibly exist in the object to be detected to undergo a thermal neutron induced fission, when the second X-ray beam bombards the photoneutron conversion target.