KEY POINT
An incident at the Department of Energy's Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) in 2014 resulted in the release of radioactive material into the environment. Initially, it was known that at least one drum in WIPP, identified as drum 68660, was involved. However, questions remained. Could the air-monitor isotopic ratios measured in WIPP at the time of the release be explained by materials in drum 68660 or were other drums involved? Could internal conditions in drum 68660 have caused the breach? What were the implications for 68660's sister drum? These questions needed to be answered as quickly as possible. This analysis, which was completed in three weeks, combined combinatorics and uncertainty analysis to provide scientists with the timely evidence they needed to either answer these important questions or to design experiments to answer them.
About the authors
E. J. Kelly is a Scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and holds a Ph.D. in Biostatistics from UCLA. She is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.
B. P. Weaver is a Scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and holds a Ph.D. in Statistics from Iowa State University.
D. K. Viers is a Scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and holds a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from Penn State University.
Acknowledgment
We thank two anonymous reviewers for insightful comments on an earlier version that helped improve this article.
Notes
1 In the initial analysis, the covariance term for the Pu240/Pu239 ratio was not included. The only difference was that in the initial analysis, there was an additional five-bag candidate {2, 3, 6, 7, 12}. This difference had no effect on the final results.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
E. J. Kelly
E. J. Kelly is a Scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and holds a Ph.D. in Biostatistics from UCLA. She is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.
B. P. Weaver
B. P. Weaver is a Scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and holds a Ph.D. in Statistics from Iowa State University.
D. K. Veirs
D. K. Viers is a Scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory and holds a Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from Penn State University.