- Breaking News THE HOTSPOTS FOR 2010
- Breaking News Holidays
- Breaking News Wish you were.. HERE?
- Breaking News HOTSPOTS 2010
Labs work on ways to deter, detect explosives By William
0 Comments | Oakland Tribune, Jul 8, 2005 | by William Brand, STAFF WRITER
The terrorist bombings in London showed graphically the formidable task stopping these savage, random attacks present society, scientists working on the problem at the Bay Area's national laboratories said Thursday.
Bottom line, experts said, explosives and the ingredients to create them are common in the modern world. They're fairly easy to obtain, easy to make and at this point detection is difficult.
Mining in the United States alone uses more than 4 billion pounds of TNT annually. Another mining explosive, Goma-2 Eco, apparently was used in the Madrid train terrorist bombs last year.
Related Results
Most Popular Articles
- America's "other" private schools
- Pakistan's water resources: problems and remedies
- Feds order Dow to clean up chemical
- Genocide, the stench of death and eating lunch in a gas chamber..
- New Nucleus research shows Plumtree leads IBM and SAP in portal ROI; Comparative report reveals 85% ROI among Plumtree customers from increased revenues and cost avoidance.
Most Recent Articles
The news about explosives is dreary, but there have been breakthroughs in bomb, chemical and biological weapons detection and more are coming:
Breakthroughs
-A device from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory that accurately screens passengers for explosives is now in use at San Francisco International Airport. The next step, a lab scientist said, is to create an explosive detection portal that all boarding passengers would walk through just as they must pass through a metal detector today.
-Chemical weapons detectors, developed at the lab and Sandia National Laboratory/Livermore, are deployed in the Washington, D.C., Metro subway. A group at Sandia and Lawrence Livermore has been working on chemical detectors since the sarin chemical attacks by a cult in the Tokyo subway in 1995.
-MicroHound, a portable explosive sniffer developed by Sandia/ Alburquerque is now being evaluated by law enforcement.
But this is just the beginning. High explosive experts at Lawrence Livermore and other government labs are developing a spectrum of new tests, including one they expect can be used easily by police officers and will eventually be standard equipment in squad cars all over the United States and around the world.
"It will work just like a drug detection kit," one Bay Area scientist said. An officer could slide it across door handles or a person and determine quickly if explosives are present."
A different problem
Susanne Gordon, a Sandia National Laboratory physicist in Livermore, who works on chemical and biological weapons detection, said explosive detectors are now used randomly at SFO. Walk- through, explosive detection portals are now being tested at a couple of airports, she said.
But subways and mass transit are an entirely different problem, Gordon said. At an airport, people expect to wait in line for screening, she said. "But imagine the line at a subway entrance."
Explosives leave traces that can be detected. But chemical and biological weapons, if well protected, are difficult to find, she said.
The best bet remains well-trained law officers and screeners.
Each of the scientists interviewed Thursday said the next time they're in London, they'll still take the Underground and ride other mass transit systems.
"I worry more about driving to work or riding my bicycle," one physicist said. Statistically, the odds of death or injury are much higher in a car or on a bike, he said.
Contact William Brand at bbrand@angnewspapers.com.
- Gap CEO volunteers to cut annual salary
- Readers Forum: Gov. Schwarzenegger should sign bill encouraging oil
- Sheriff Rupf's critics off-base
- Selling liquor violates Islam, but Yemenis do it to survive
- Controlling your dog or cat's arthritis pain
- SoCal parents fight use of kids' images on adult Internet sites
- Ed Blonz: Can pureed asparagus cure cancer?
- Review: Rub elbows with Rodin at Cantor Center's Cool Cafe
- Getting to the root of beautiful hair: shiny, silky hair begins with a healthy scalp - includes list of resources and a recipe for an herbal scalp tonic
- Industry Experts Launch Money Management Resources to Help People Overcome Debt and Learn Proper Money Management Practices
- Portfolio forecasting tools: what you need to know
- Made from scratch: When Honda built a plant in Alabama it also built a workforce-using local workers who had no experience in making cars - Recruitment & Hiring
- SmartDisk's New VST Flash Media Reader(TM) Reads SmartMedia(TM), CompactFlash(TM) From A Single Desktop Unit
- John Seely Brown Inducted Into 2004 Industry Hall of Fame
- FDA Approves REMICADE(R) for Ninth Indication: Psoriatic Arthritis
- Author Takes the Pat Robertson Weight-Loss Challenge
Content provided in partnership with