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Nakashima, Yosuke*; Takeda, Hisahito*; Ichimura, Kazuya*; Hosoi, Katsuhiro*; Oki, Kensuke*; Sakamoto, Mizuki*; Hirata, Mafumi*; Ichimura, Makoto*; Ikezoe, Ryuya*; Imai, Tsuyoshi*; et al.
Journal of Nuclear Materials, 463, p.537 - 540, 2015/08
Times Cited Count:18 Percentile:83.95(Materials Science, Multidisciplinary)Nakashima, Yosuke*; Sakamoto, Mizuki*; Yoshikawa, Masayuki*; Oki, Kensuke*; Takeda, Hisahito*; Ichimura, Kazuya*; Hosoi, Katsuhiro*; Hirata, Mafumi*; Ichimura, Makoto*; Ikezoe, Ryuya*; et al.
Proceedings of 25th IAEA Fusion Energy Conference (FEC 2014) (CD-ROM), 8 Pages, 2014/10
Nagai, Yasuki; Makii, Hiroyuki; Namiki, Shinji; Iwamoto, Osamu; Iwamoto, Nobuyuki; Sawahata, Hiroyuki*
Journal of the Physical Society of Japan, 81(8), p.085003_1 - 085003_2, 2012/08
Times Cited Count:1 Percentile:11.02(Physics, Multidisciplinary)We propose to use the radionuclide Cs as a tracer.
-ray energy of the most intense line from the decay of
Cs is 668 keV, which is very near to that of the 662 keV from the decay of
Cs, while the half-life of
Cs is 6.5 d.
Cs can be produced by nuclear reactions such as
Cs(n,2n)
Cs,
Cs(r,n)
Cs or
Xe(p,n)
Cs. The
Cs tracer would be useful in the quantitative studies of radionuclide
Cs contaminant in human, and in any experimental studies in the minimization of radionuclide
Cs contamination in agricultural and stock farming products.
Tanaka, Kazuya*; Yokoseki, Takashi*; Fujita, Natsuko; Iwamoto, Naoya; Makino, Takahiro; Onoda, Shinobu; Oshima, Takeshi; Tanaka, Yuki*; Kandori, Mikio*; Yoshie, Toru*; et al.
no journal, ,
no abstracts in English
Fukumoto, Masakatsu; Ichimura, Kazuya*; Nakashima, Yosuke*; Takeda, Hisahito*; Iwamoto, Miki*; Hosoda, Yasunari*; Sakamoto, Mizuki*; Kubo, Hirotaka; Shoji, Mamoru*
no journal, ,
no abstracts in English
Nakashima, Yosuke*; Ichimura, Kazuya*; Takeda, Hisahito*; Iwamoto, Miki*; Hosoda, Yasunari*; Shimizu, Keita*; Oki, Kensuke*; Sakamoto, Mizuki*; Ono, Noriyasu*; Kado, Shinichiro*; et al.
no journal, ,
no abstracts in English
Tokashiki, Mikio*; Ikehara, Tadashi*; Tada, Kenichi; Egawa, Toru*; Yokoyama, Kenji; Iwamoto, Osamu
no journal, ,
The bias factor methods have been widely used for applications to reduce uncertainties of the predicted value in the reactor physics characteristics. In the present study, an attempt has been made to apply the extended bias factor method to qualifying the reliability of measured data by assuming the uncertainty of the numerical model being negligible and the covariance of cross section being reliable. In this presentation, comparison results will be shown between actual measured value and the predicted value of a benchmark case sampled from the benchmark suite. Furthermore, it will be shown that the comparison and their uncertainty enable us to qualify the degree of reliability of the actual measured value.