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News article9 March 2022

JRC contributed to the preparation of the “Handbook of Cultural Heritage”

JRC contributed to a chapter of the “Handbook of Cultural Heritage” published by Springer International Publishing.

Handbook of Cultural Heritage Analysis
Handbook of Cultural Heritage Analysis
Springer

JRC scientist in collaboration with a Professor of Delft University of Technology is the author of the chapter on “Neutron Resonance Analysis for Archaeological and Cultural Heritage Applications” of the Handbook of Cultural Heritage Analysis.  The chapter is based on non-destructive analysis methods (NRCA, neutron resonance capture analysis, and NRTA, neutron transmission analysis) that have been developed at the JRC and Delft University to study objects and artefacts of archaeological and cultural heritage interest.

Objective

The main objective of this project was to develop a set of complementary non-destructive analysis methods to investigate objects of high cultural-heritage significance selected as a result of broad-scope archaeological research.

The use of NRCA and NRTA to study objects of interest for cultural heritage offers several advantages compared to other techniques:

  • they are not invasive,
  • they do not require any sample taking,
  • and do not result in any residual radioactivity compared to other neutron interrogation techniques.

The techniques are of interest to a broad field of applications ranging from objects of interest for cultural heritage to the investigation of spent nuclear fuel pellets. The development of these techniques is a spin-off of the main nuclear data activities carried out at the GELINA facility of JRC Geel.

NRCA measurments at GELINA laboratory
Capture spectrum as a function neutron energy resulting from NRCA measurements at a 12.5m station of JRC GELINA facility, of a figurine that is supposed to present the Greek god Pan.
H. Postma

 

Outcome

The specific chapter in the handbook is mainly of interest for scientists working in the field of archaeology or cultural heritage. However, the technique can also be applied to characterise complex nuclear material such as spent nuclear fuel pellets. One of these techniques is at present used by the “Commissariat à l’énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives” (CEA, France) to characterise nuclear materials and validate nuclear data in the resonance region.

Sources

Details

Publication date
9 March 2022