The U.S. Department of Homeland Security will be sponsoring a test to study how dangerous gases would disperse through New York City streets and
subways. The test will use harmless "tracer" gases and detectors placed throughout the city to track the gas dispersal pattern. The operation could
start as soon as this Saturday.
www.newsday.com
Amid heightened anti-terrorism vigilance in New York City's subways, a mammoth Department of Homeland Security-sponsored project starting as early as
Saturday will seek to answer how harmful gases might disperse through midtown's streets and the warren of subway tunnels beneath them.
The simulation, which will use colorless, odorless and harmless "tracer" gases, follows a smaller effort in March that focused on the Madison Square
Garden area. This time, a team of more than 150 researchers and volunteers working on the Urban Dispersion Program's second field study will fan out
over a much larger section of midtown, ranging from 37th to 59th streets and from 10th to Third avenues, and including stations along the Broadway
subway line and other lines in the area.
Scientists will release the gases at four of eight possible locations above ground, depending on the wind, within an office building and on a subway
platform of the Broadway line at 50th Street and Seventh Avenue.
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This sounds like an interesting operation. I wonder if they have intelligence on a possible poison gas attack that would lead them into thinking this
is necessary.
Related News Links:
urbandispersion.pnl.gov