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U.K., Japan to extend decommissioning partnership
The U.K.’s Sellafield Ltd. and Japan’s Tokyo Electric Power Company have pledge to continue to work together for up to an additional 10 years, extending a cooperative agreement begun in 2014 following the 2011 tsunami that resulted in the irreparable damage of TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi plant.
Katsumi Hayashi, Takashi Nakamura
Nuclear Science and Engineering | Volume 87 | Number 2 | June 1984 | Pages 123-135
Technical Paper | doi.org/10.13182/NSE84-A17707
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
The dose distribution and the spectrum variation of neutrons due to the skyshine effect have been measured with various detectors in the environment surrounding the cyclotron of the Institute for Nuclear Study, University of Tokyo. The source neutrons were produced by stopping a 52-MeV proton beam into a carbon beam stopper and were extracted upward from the opening in the concrete shield surrounding the cyclotron and then leaked into the atmosphere through the cyclotron building. The dose distribution and the spectrum of neutrons near the beam stopper were also measured in order to get information on the skyshine source. The measured skyshine neutron spectra and dose distribution were analyzed with two codes, MMCR2 and SKYSHINE-II, with the result that the calculated results are in good agreement with the experiment. Valuable characteristics of this experiment are the determination of the energy spectrum and dose distribution of source neutron and the measurement of skyshine neutrons from an actual large-scale accelerator building to the exclusion of direct neutrons transported through the air. This experiment must be useful as a kind of benchmark experiment on the skyshine phenomenon.