Japanese scientists say they have successfully completed a pilot program that allows them to use cosmic rays to determine the location of nuclear fuel inside the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant.

“The technology enables you to find where nuclear fuel is anywhere in the world," Fumihiko Takasaki, a researcher at the High Energy Accelerator Research Organisation (KEK), told AFP news agency.



The experiment - using a technique known as muon scattering radiography - had been running at a disused nuclear plant in Ibaraki between from February 2012 until last month.



Tiny, high-energy particles called muons are beamed down from space and pass through most materials, including human bones, concrete, and water. They form a consistent stream, with about 1000 moving through one square foot of air on Earth every minute.



While some substances only slightly alter their path, a few block them altogether – particularly the uranium and plutonium used as nuclear fuel. The deflections as a result of these encounters are specific, consistent, and well known to scientists.



By measuring them, they can see an outline of substances impeding the muons, and create a three-dimensional map.

Muon scattering radiography has existed since the 1960s. It has been used to map the insides of volcanoes, to examine if there are tunnels underneath ancient pyramids, and to scan cargo for potential nuclear contraband.But there was never a need to develop a detector to clean up a nuclear site - until the Fukushima plant was devastated by the devastating tsunami and earthquake on the eastern coast of Japan in March 2011.



With much of the plant covered in debris or submerged under water, it is difficult and dangerous to enter and find out exactly where the deformed remains of the melted down reactors remain.



At the same time, fuel from them keeps mixing with groundwater, creating a constant leak of radioactive water that plant operator TEPCO is struggling to contain.



With the clean-up bill already in excess of US$30 billion - with $50 billion more expected to be spent on pollution removal, and another $15 billion on decommissioning the reactors - TEPCO invested in studying the possibility of using muon scattering radiography two years ago.

Scientists from KEK joined with the University of Tokyo, University of Tsukuba, Tokyo Metropolitan University, and some American colleagues to create a functioning detector.Takasaki has said that just five detectors placed around the stricken plant for two months could create an accurate representation of where its most radioactive and dangerous elements are located.

However, he claims that TEPCO has not yet officially confirmed that it will use the technology it is being offered.