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Decommissioning & Environmental Sciences
The mission of the Decommissioning and Environmental Sciences (DES) Division is to promote the development and use of those skills and technologies associated with the use of nuclear energy and the optimal management and stewardship of the environment, sustainable development, decommissioning, remediation, reutilization, and long-term surveillance and maintenance of nuclear-related installations, and sites. The target audience for this effort is the membership of the Division, the Society, and the public at large.
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2024 ANS Winter Conference and Expo
November 17–21, 2024
Orlando, FL|Renaissance Orlando at SeaWorld
Standards Program
The Standards Committee is responsible for the development and maintenance of voluntary consensus standards that address the design, analysis, and operation of components, systems, and facilities related to the application of nuclear science and technology. Find out What’s New, check out the Standards Store, or Get Involved today!
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Nuclear waste: Trying again, with an approach that is flexible and vague
The Department of Energy has started over on the quest for a place to store used fuel. Its new goal, it says, is to foster a national conversation (although this might better be described as many local conversations) about a national problem that can only be solved at the local level with a “consent-based” approach. And while the department is touting the various milestones it has already reached on the way to an interim repository, the program is structured in a way that means its success will not be measurable for years.
Jussi K. Vaurio
Nuclear Science and Engineering | Volume 87 | Number 4 | August 1984 | Pages 490-495
Technical Note | doi.org/10.13182/NSE84-A18515
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
The objective of “statistical screening” is to determine the effective input variables that contribute most to the total variation or uncertainty of the output of a complex computer code. This is accomplished by performing a relatively small number of computer runs with the code and performing statistical analyses on the results. There are two fundamentally different classes of statistical methods available, one based on overdetermined, the other on underdetermined, systems of equations. The basic features of both are described and compared, and a number of critical issues are discussed. Reference is made to a computer code system incorporating both methods and applied to numerical and physical problems.