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apatite without interstitial oxygens due to the overbonded channel oxygensFujii, Kotaro*; Yashima, Masatomo*; Hibino, Keisuke*; Shiraiwa, Masahiro*; Fukuda, Koichiro*; Nakayama, Susumu*; Ishizawa, Nobuo*; Hanashima, Takayasu*; Ohara, Takashi
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, 6(23), p.10835 - 10846, 2018/06
Times Cited Count:36 Percentile:69.55(Chemistry, Physical)Tanaka, Taiki*; Narikiyo, Yoshihiro*; Morita, Kosuke*; Fujita, Kunihiro*; Kaji, Daiya*; Morimoto, Koji*; Yamaki, Sayaka*; Wakabayashi, Yasuo*; Tanaka, Kengo*; Takeyama, Mirei*; et al.
Journal of the Physical Society of Japan, 87(1), p.014201_1 - 014201_9, 2018/01
Times Cited Count:28 Percentile:77.96(Physics, Multidisciplinary)Excitation functions of quasielastic scattering cross sections for the
Ca +
Pb,
Ti +
Pb, and
Ca +
Cm reactions were successfully measured by using the gas-filled recoil-ion separator GARIS. Fusion barrier distributions were extracted from these data, and compared with the coupled-channels calculations. It was found that the peak energies of the barrier distributions for the
Ca +
Pb and
Ti +
Pb systems coincide with those of the 2n evaporation channel cross sections for the systems, while that of the
Ca +
Cm is located slightly below the 4n evaporation ones. This results provide us helpful information to predict the optimum beam energy to synthesize superheavy nuclei.
Ishizawa, Akihiro*; Idomura, Yasuhiro; Imadera, Kenji*; Kasuya, Naohiro*; Kanno, Ryutaro*; Satake, Shinsuke*; Tatsuno, Tomoya*; Nakata, Motoki*; Nunami, Masanori*; Maeyama, Shinya*; et al.
Purazuma, Kaku Yugo Gakkai-Shi, 92(3), p.157 - 210, 2016/03
The high-performance computer system Helios which is located at The Computational Simulation Centre (CSC) in The International Fusion Energy Research Centre (IFERC) started its operation in January 2012 under the Broader Approach (BA) agreement between Japan and the EU. The Helios system has been used for magnetised fusion related simulation studies in the EU and Japan and has kept high average usage rate. As a result, the Helios system has contributed to many research products in a wide range of research areas from core plasma physics to reactor material and reactor engineering. This project review gives a short catalogue of domestic simulation research projects. First, we outline the IFERC-CSC project. After that, shown are objectives of the research projects, numerical schemes used in simulation codes, obtained results and necessary computations in future.
Maeyama, Shinya*; Idomura, Yasuhiro; Watanabe, Tomohiko*; Nakata, Motoki*; Yagi, Masatoshi; Miyato, Naoaki; Ishizawa, Akihiro*; Nunami, Masanori*
Physical Review Letters, 114(25), p.255002_1 - 255002_5, 2015/06
Times Cited Count:114 Percentile:95.43(Physics, Multidisciplinary)Multiscale gyrokinetic turbulence simulations with the real ion-to-electron mass ratio and
value are realized for the first time, where the
value is given by the ratio of plasma pressure to magnetic pressure and characterizes electromagnetic effects on microinstabilities. Numerical analysis at both the electron scale and the ion scale is used to reveal the mechanism of their cross-scale interactions. Even with the real- mass scale separation, ion-scale turbulence eliminates electron-scale streamers and dominates heat transport, not only of ions but also of electrons. When the ion-scale modes are stabilized by finite-
effects, the contribution of the electron-scale dynamics to the turbulent transport becomes non-negligible and turns out to enhance ion-scale turbulent transport.
Maeyama, Shinya; Ishizawa, Akihiro*; Watanabe, Tomohiko*; Nakata, Motoki; Miyato, Naoaki; Yagi, Masatoshi; Idomura, Yasuhiro
Physics of Plasmas, 21(5), p.052301_1 - 052301_12, 2014/05
Times Cited Count:23 Percentile:67.29(Physics, Fluids & Plasmas)Ishikawa, Satoru*; Ishimaru, Yasuhiro*; Igura, Masato*; Kuramata, Masato*; Abe, Tadashi*; Senoura, Takeshi*; Hase, Yoshihiro; Arao, Tomohito*; Nishizawa, Naoko*; Nakanishi, Hiromi*
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(47), p.19166 - 19171, 2012/11
Times Cited Count:439 Percentile:99.73(Multidisciplinary Sciences)Rice (
L.) is one of major sources of dietary intake of cadmium (Cd) for the human. However, the reliable technique to reduce substantially rice Cd contamination has not been offered so far. Here, we report the ion-beam irradiated rice mutants that do not nearly accumulate Cd in the grains and the mutant gene responsible for the Cd limitation. We found three mutants in which a favorable low-Cd trait is expressed by the different mutations on the same gene (
), and the transporter encoded by the mutant gene
had a defective function of root Cd influx. The mutants adapted well in the Cd-polluted paddy fields by exhibiting nearly non-detectable Cd concentrations in their grains in accordance with no adverse economic traits. The DNA marker has been developed to breed new cultivars carrying
. Our findings would be useful for greatly reducing the Cd level of paddy rice.
I in the atmosphere emitted from nuclear fuel reprocessing plantsNishizawa, Masato; Suzuki, Takashi; Nagai, Haruyasu; Togawa, Orihiko
Proceedings of Joint International Conference of 7th Supercomputing in Nuclear Application and 3rd Monte Carlo (SNA + MC 2010) (USB Flash Drive), 4 Pages, 2010/10
Suzuki et al. (
,
, 268-275, 2008) estimated that more than 80% of Iodine-129 (
I) in seawater in the Japan Sea came from nuclear fuel reprocessing plants. Considering the distance from the main nuclear reprocessing plants in Europe to the Japan Sea and the time scales of atmospheric and ocean circulations, large portion of
I in the Japan Sea is presumed to be transported through the atmosphere. In the present study, a global chemical transport model, MOZART-4, is applied to investigate the behavior of
I emitted from nuclear fuel reprocessing plants in Europe (Sellafield in the UK and La Hague in France) and to estimate the distribution in the atmosphere and deposition in remote sites. The result of numerical simulation for more than fifty-year period from the 1950s is validated by comparison with measurements of
I around the world and analyzed to clarify the characteristic of the distributions of concentration and deposition of
I. The modeled concentrations of
I in precipitation in Europe and depositions in Japanese waters are in the same order as measurements. The emitted
I to the atmosphere is distributed and deposited all over the Northern Hemisphere due to the prevailing westerlies. The emission of
I to the atmosphere is thus important in considering the transport and deposition of
I to remote sites.
Nishizawa, Masato; Suzuki, Takashi; Nagai, Haruyasu; Togawa, Orihiko
JAEA-Conf 2010-001, p.105 - 108, 2010/03
no abstracts in English
Rn and its decay products coupled with a mesoscale meteorological model, 2; Numerical analysis on the increase in
dose rate observed in the coastal area of Fukushima prefectureNishizawa, Masato; Nagai, Haruyasu; Chino, Masamichi
Journal of Nuclear Science and Technology, 45(11), p.1129 - 1137, 2008/11
Times Cited Count:1 Percentile:9.34(Nuclear Science & Technology)A three-dimensional Eulerian numerical model for
Rn and its decay products coupled with a mesoscale meteorological model, MM5-TMNR, is applied to investigate the mechanism of the naturally induced increase of
dose rate observed at the coastal area of Fukushima prefecture on October, 2002. The results obtained by MM5-TMNR are verified by the comparisons with observed wind, precipitation and
dose rate, and adequate to examine the mechanism. The unusual increase of
dose rate is occurred by the combination of the synoptic-scale transport of natural radionuclides due to inflow of cold air mass from the Asian Continent and the meso-
-scale precipitation process within the coastal area of Fukushima prefecture. The contribution rate of natural radionuclides from the Asian Continent to the increase of
dose rate is estimated to be more than 60%.
Rn and its decay products coupled with a mesoscale meteorological model, 1; Model description and validationNishizawa, Masato; Nagai, Haruyasu; Chino, Masamichi; Moriizumi, Jun*; Yoshioka, Katsuhiro*; Okura, Takehisa; Yamazawa, Hiromi*; Iida, Takao*; Mukai, Hitoshi*; Tojima, Yasunori*; et al.
Journal of Nuclear Science and Technology, 44(11), p.1458 - 1466, 2007/11
Times Cited Count:5 Percentile:35.51(Nuclear Science & Technology)A three-dimensional Eulerian numerical model for
Rn and its decay products coupled with a mesoscale meteorological model has been developed and applied to the reproduction of the daily and monthly variations of
Rn concentration, the monthly variation of
Pb deposition in Japan and the temporal variation of
dose rate after the cold front passage in the coastal area of the Japan Sea for the verification of model capability. The results are as follows: (1) The model reproduced the monthly variation of surface
Rn concentration in remote islands, but underestimated inland concentration due to coarse vertical resolution near the surface of the model. (2) The model reproduced the seasonal variation of the observed and the long-term yearly averaged
Pb depositions as long as precipitations are predicted precisely. (3) The model reproduced the rise of
dose rate in precipitation accompanied with the cold front passage. In particular,
Rn decay products in melted snow and graupel contributed the rise of
dose rate.
Nishizawa, Masato*; Chino, Masamichi
Taiki Kankyo Gakkai-Shi, 39(1), p.31 - 42, 2004/01
no abstracts in English
Kinouchi, Nobuyuki; Oishi, Tetsuya; Noguchi, Hiroshi; Kato, Shohei; Ishizawa, Masato*
Radioisotopes, 50(9), p.403 - 407, 2001/09
no abstracts in English
Kinouchi, Nobuyuki; Oishi, Tetsuya; Noguchi, Hiroshi; Kato, Shohei; Ishizawa, Masato*
Proceedings of 10th International Congress of the International Radiation Protection Association (IRPA-10) (CD-ROM), 4 Pages, 2000/05
no abstracts in English
Maeyama, Shinya; Watanabe, Tomohiko*; Idomura, Yasuhiro; Nakata, Motoki; Yagi, Masatoshi; Miyato, Naoaki; Nunami, Masanori*; Ishizawa, Akihiro*
no journal, ,
no abstracts in English
Maeyama, Shinya; Watanabe, Tomohiko*; Idomura, Yasuhiro; Nakata, Motoki; Yagi, Masatoshi; Miyato, Naoaki; Nunami, Masanori*; Ishizawa, Akihiro*
no journal, ,
no abstracts in English
Terada, Hiroaki; Nishizawa, Masato; Nagai, Haruyasu; Chino, Masamichi; Sasaki, Koichi*
no journal, ,
SPEEDI-MP has been developed for comprehensive prediction of migration of radionuclides in the atmosphere, ocean, and terrestrial region. In this study, we made attempt to distinguish the contributions to observed air dose rate between natural and artificial radionuclides from the reprocessing facility in Rokkasho, Aomori during the period when the increase of dose rate by precipitation was observed. For the purpose, two atmospheric dispersion models of SPEEDI-MP were applied, which were an Eulerian model for natural radionuclides and a Lagrangian particle model for artificial radionuclides. Simulation period is 10 September 2007. The data used for the model calculation and comparisons with the calculations are Grid Point Value (GPV), AMeDAS from Japan Meteorological Agency, and
Kr release amount, meteorological observations near the stack and environmental monitoring data around the facility from Japan Nuclear Fuel Limited (JNFL).
Terada, Hiroaki; Nishizawa, Masato; Nagai, Haruyasu; Chino, Masamichi; Sasaki, Koichi*
no journal, ,
SPEEDI-MP has been developed for comprehensive prediction of migration of radionuclides in the atmosphere, ocean, and terrestrial region. In this study, we made attempt to distinguish the contributions to observed air dose rate between natural and artificial radionuclides from the reprocessing facility in Rokkasho, Aomori. For the purpose, two atmospheric dispersion models of SPEEDI-MP were applied, which were an Eulerian model for natural radionuclides and a Lagrangian particle model for artificial radionuclides. During the period of 10 September 2007, the model prediction performance was improved by using the observation data at the height of 250 m and 300 m above ground in addition to those from the surface to 150 m level for data assimilation in meteorological prediction. We could also generally reproduce the monitoring results observed at the monitoring stations approximately 4 km distant from the main stack in 12 September 2007 with the same calculation method.
Nishizawa, Masato; Suzuki, Takashi; Nagai, Haruyasu; Togawa, Orihiko
no journal, ,
no abstracts in English
Nishizawa, Masato; Suzuki, Takashi; Nagai, Haruyasu; Togawa, Orihiko
no journal, ,
no abstracts in English
Nishizawa, Masato; Nagai, Haruyasu; Chino, Masamichi; Sasaki, Hirotomo*; Kato, Kentaro*
no journal, ,
no abstracts in English