A new paperless electronic, peer reviewed
journal created by the International School of Advanced Studies (SISSA)
and the Institute of Physics (IOP) is launched January 2006. The
Journal of Instrumentation (JINST) will cover all areas of
scientific instrumentation and deal with both concepts and experimental
techniques as well as with related theoretical aspects, modeling and
simulations. JINST belongs to the family of J-journals published jointly
by SISSA (International
School for Advanced Studies,
Trieste, Italy) and the Institute of Physics
Publishing (Bristol, UK). The J-journals family
includes Journal of High Energy Physics (JHEP), Journal of
Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics (JCAP),
and Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment
(JSTAT). JINST will start accepting contributions January 9, 2006. The
announcement at http://www.iop.org/EJ/journal/1748-0221
includes a list of the Advisory & Editorial Boards, a description of
the scope covered by the journal, author guidelines, as well as related
content.
Amos Breskin
JINST Scientific Director
Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho Falls, Idaho, contributed the Simulation
Environment for Radiotherapy Applications (SERA) developed for
boron-neutron capture therapy (BNCT) patient treatment planning by
researchers at the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory
(INEEL) and students and faculty at Montana State University (MSU)
Computer Science Department. This is the first release through RSICC, but
it is the final release of the Version 1 CO program. SERA has a flexible, user-friendly GUI for all modules.
It allows the use of CT, MRI, or PET image data. Unique neutron transport
geometry provides rapid Monte Carlo
solutions. Geometric modeling fidelity is equivalent to image
resolution.
SERA is a suite
of command line or interactively launched software modules, including
graphical, geometric reconstruction, and execution interface modules for
developing BNCT treatment plans. The program allows the user to develop
geometric models of the patient (derived from CT and MRI images), perform
dose computation for these geometric models, and display the computed
doses as three dimensional representations on overlays of the original
images. A three-dimensional Monte Carlo
radiation transport model, seraMC, developed at
INL, is used to calculate the complex radiation fields present in BNCT
treatment.
This release of SERA was developed to run
under the RedHat Linux Operating System (version 7.2 or newer) or the
Solaris™ Operating System (version 2.6 or newer) in the X Windows
environment (X 11 R6), Motif 1.2 or equivalent, OpenGL. The packages
needed for installation are gcc and g77
compilers, OpenMotif development libraries, and
OpenGL development libraries. Included are the INL report in PDF format
and a Unix tar file which includes source codes, scripts and test cases.
Reference: INEEL/EXT-02-00698 (June 2002). C (70%) and Fortran (30%); PC
running Linux and Sun running Solaris (C00729MNYCP00).
The State Scientific Center of Russia,
Research Institute of Atomic Reactors, Division of Radionuclide Sources
and Preparations, Ulyanovsk region, Russia,
contributed the ORIP-XXI software. This suite of computer codes was
developed for the study of radioactive and stable isotope transmutation
chains, i.e. networks with feedbacks. Using these programs, it is possible
to estimate various quantitative characteristics of a transmutation chain
both for nuclide irradiations in neutron fluxes and in case of pure
radioactive decays. The main parts of ORIP-XXI are NKE, the electronic
nuclide chart; ChainFinder, the program for
finding transmutation chains; and ChainSolver,
the program for simulating transmutation.
All programs use a common data file which
contains nuclear constants and decay data for more than 2800 nuclides with
atomic weights from 1 to 293 (nuclear charge from 1 to 118) and
characteristics of chemical elements. The file includes data on fission
product yields for thermal and fast neutron induced fission of 22 heavy
isotopes. Users may edit data as necessary for carrying out transmutation
calculations. The transmutation calculation code, ChainSolver, allows users to take into account neutron
flux depression and self-shielding factors, the latter using additional
data from the resolved resonance parameters file. All data are taken from
freely available public nuclear data libraries.
The Windows 32 applications run on
personal computers. The Borland Delphi™ Object Pascal and GNU Fortran
compiler (MinGW port for Windows) were used to
create the executables in the package. The package is transmitted on a CD
in a WinZIP file which contains the source
files, PC executables, and test data. References: Papers from State
Scientific Centre of Russia – Research Institute of
Atomic Reactors (May 2003). Pascal, Fortran 95; Pentium computers
(C00731PC58600).
CONFERENCES, COURSES,
SYMPOSIA
RSICC attempts to keep its users and
contributors advised of conferences, courses, and symposia in the field of
radiation protection, transport, and shielding through this section of the newsletter. Should you be
involved in the planning/organization of such events, feel free to send
your announcements and calls for
papers via email to riceaf@ornl.gov with
“conferences” in the subject line by the 20th of each month. Please
include the announcement in its native format as an attachment to the
message. If the meeting is on a
website, please include the url.
Every attempt is made to ensure that the
links provided in the Conference and Calendar sections of this newsletter are
correct and live. However, the very nature of the web creates the
possibility that the links may
become unavailable. In that case, please call or mail the contact
provided.
The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
(ETH) in Zurich is hosting the 23rd of the
Series, “Modeling and Computation of Multiphase Flow,” March 20–24, 2006,
in Zurich.
The series will consist of:
Part
I:
Bases
Part
IIA: New
Reactor Systems and Methods
Part
IIB:
Computational Multi-Fluid Dynamics (CMFD)
Part
IIC: CMFD with
Commercial Codes
Detailed information is available at http://www.ascomp.ch/ShortCourse
and correspondence may be addressed to Prof. G. Yadigaroglu, Short Course Multiphase Flow, ETH WEN
B-13, Weinbergstr. 94,
CH-8006 Zurich, Switzerland (phone: + 41 44 632 4615, fax: + 41 44 632
1105, email: yadi@ethz.ch, url: http://www.ascomp.ch/ShortCourse/Short-Course.html.)
MCNPX Workshops
Lead Teachers: Drs. John
Hendricks, Gregg McKinney, Laurie Waters
Organizer: HQC
Professional Services
Contact: bill@mcnpxworkshops.com
Information: http://mcnpxworkshops.com/
and MCNPX homepage: http://mcnpx.lanl.gov/
2006
Schedule |
March 27–31 |
Intermediate |
Cape
Town,
South
Africa |
June
12–16 |
Introductory |
Santa
Fe, NM |
MCNPX is packed with new and exciting
plotting features, including numerous mesh tally options which can be
superimposed on your geometry plot and plotted within the MCNPX run,
eliminating the need for post-processing and costly additional plotting
package(s). You can plot particle flux, tracks, dosage, and energy
deposition as well as source points and many others.
The
workshops include hands-on instruction, generally on PC Windows machines. Subject to participant export approval from the MCNPX
beta test team, participants will be able to access the Fortran 90 version of
MCNPX 2.4, the LA150 (150 MeV) cross-section
data for over 40 isotopes for
incident neutrons and protons
and 12 for photonuclear interactions, and a notebook of
viewgraphs.
Follow-up consultation for class
participants will be provided.
The classes are taught by experienced
MCNPX code developers and instructors. More information on code versions
and capabilities is available at MCNPX Workshops web site http://mcnpxworkshops.com/.
To
register go to http://mcnpxworkshops.com/regform.html.
ANS
RP&S Division Biennial Topical Meeting
The
American Nuclear Society Radiation Protection and Shielding Division
Biennial Topical Meeting will be held April 3–6, 2006, at the
Pecos River Village in Carlsbad, New
Mexico. The conference will open with a keynote
address by Dr. Glenn Knoll. Other outstanding plenary speakers will
include Dr. Kenneth Shultis, Dr. Cassiano de
Oliveira and other special speakers.
Workshops will be offered on April 2 and 6,
both morning and afternoon. These continuing education classes with the
time and location are listed in the conference website.
There
will be no charge to those registered for the conference for any of the
workshops, although pre-registration is requested. Attendance at the
conference will provide continuing education credits for various technical
certifications depending on the degree of participation by the attendee.
Tours will be offered of the Waste Isolation
Pilot Plant (WIPP), a licensed and operating deep geological repository
for transuranic waste. The actual number of
visitors WIPP can accommodate will depend on operational conditions and
the work schedule of the facility. The WIPP site is a federal facility and
advance notice will be required for a site visit so early registration is
strongly encouraged.
The
Trinity Site is also available to the general public independent of the
conference on Saturday, April 1, 2006. The Trinity Site is the location of
the world’s first detonation of a nuclear weapon.
The
call for papers, program and contact information for the conference can be
found at http://www.ans-rpsw-carlsbad.com/.
The National
Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP) will hold its 2006
Annual Meeting April 3–4, at the Crystal City Marriott in Arlington, Virginia. The April 26, 1986,
accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power
plant near Kiev in the Ukrainian
Republic of the
Former Soviet Union was the worst nuclear power accident in history. Large
numbers of people were contaminated in the Ukraine Republic, Belarus Republic, Western Russia, Western Europe, and
Scandinavia. More than 200,000 people in
the Ukraine and
Belarus Republics were evacuated and resettled as a
result of significant fallout from the Chernobyl accident.
On the twentieth anniversary of this
disastrous event, the 2006 NCRP Annual Meeting will provide a
comprehensive retrospective review and analysis of the effects of the
Chernobyl
nuclear accident on human health and the environment. Topics to be
discussed by international experts include:
·
the initial release, distribution and migration of radiation from
Chernobyl;
·
efforts to clean up, contain and dispose of radionuclides released by the accident;
·
health effects observed in emergency responders and cleanup
workers;
·
exposures and health effects among populations living close to, and
distant from, the Chernobyl reactor site;
·
lessons learned from the Chernobyl accident, including improved
nuclear safety procedures, better preparedness for future nuclear
accidents, and more effective management and mitigation of human health
consequences of such events; and
·
international perspectives on the future
use of nuclear technology and nuclear power in comparison with other power
sources.
The program and registration for the
meeting can be accessed at http://www.ncrponline.org/dates.html.
This
two-day training course on neutron spectra unfolding will be held April
7–8, 2006, in Cape
Town, South
Africa. The training course is organized
by the Neutron Radiation Department of the Physikalisch- Technische Bundesanstalt
(PTB), Braunschweig, Germany. Additional support is
provided by EURADOS. The course is intended for those who do spectrometry
in neutron or mixed neutron/photon fields and need to analyze their data
using unfolding procedures; emphasis is on practical aspects of unfolding.
A
series of lectures in the morning sessions will provide an introduction to
unfolding as well as allow for discussions on the theory of unfolding. In
the afternoon sessions participants will work on specific examples at
PC-workplaces using the UMG software package provided by PTB (UMG:
Unfolding with GRAVEL and MAXED, currently distributed by NEA as code
package NEA-1665 and by RSICC as code package PSR-529). We will focus on
Bonner sphere measurements for our discussion of few-channel unfolding,
and on liquid scintillation spectrometer (NE213) measurements for our
discussion of multi-channel unfolding.
The
number of participants will be restricted due to the limited number of
PC-workplaces available. Therefore, you should register as soon as
possible. For on-line registration and further information please visit
the website at: http://www.ptb.de/utc2006/. Contact:
Burkhard Wiegel, PTB,
email Burkhard.Wiegel@ptb.de
The fee for the course
is 800 Euro and includes a CD with a complete set of notes and unfolding
software, as well as refreshments.
DATES: 17–21 July 2006 (4.5
days)
FEE:
$1,450 per person
PLACE: The MESA Complex, Room 130, University of New
Mexico-Los Alamos
Campus
Monte Carlo type calculations are ideally suited to
solving a variety of problems in radiation protection and dosimetry. The
Los Alamos MCNP™ code is a general and powerful Monte
Carlo transport code for photons, neutrons, and electrons, and
can be safely described as the “industry standard.” This course is aimed
at the HP, medical physicist, and rad engineer
with no prior experience with Monte Carlo
techniques. The focus is almost entirely on the application of MCNP™ to
solve a variety of practical problems in radiation shielding and
dosimetry. The intent is to “jump start” the student toward using MCNP™
productively. With a little practice and study of the examples, many will
find they are able to solve problems that have, in the past, been out of
reach.
Course content: Extensive interactive
practice sessions are conducted on a personal computer. Topics will
include an overview of the MCNP™ code and the Monte Carlo method, input
file preparation, geometry, source definition, standard MCNP tallies,
interpretation of the output file, exposure and dose rate calculations,
radiation shielding, photon skyshine, detector simulation and dosimetry.
Students will be provided with a comprehensive class manual and a diskette
containing all of the practice problems. This course has been granted 32
Continuing Education Credits by the AAHP (2005-00-003), and 4.5 CM points
by the American Board of Industrial Hygiene. The course is offered by the
Health Physics Measurements Group at the Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Registration is available online at: http://drambuie.lanl.gov/~esh4/mcnp.htm.
Make checks (U.S. dollars on a U.S. bank )
payable to the University of
California and mail with name,
address, and phone number to: David Seagraves, Mail Stop J573, Los Alamos
National Laboratory, Group HSR-4, MCNP Class, Los Alamos, NM 87545.
Inquiries regarding registration and class
space availability should be made to David Seagraves, 505-667-4959, fax:
505-665-7686, e-mail: dseagraves@lanl.gov. Technical
questions may also be directed to Dick Olsher,
505-667-3364; e-mail: dick@lanl.gov.
Please note that this course is separate
from and independent of the courses being offered by the MCNP and MCNPX
Teams at LANL.
Richard H. Olsher
PHYSOR 2006
The
Canadian Nuclear Society has announced that the ANS Reactor Physics
Topical PHYSOR-2006, “Advances in Nuclear Analysis and Simulation,” will
be held in Vancouver,
BC, Canada, Sept. 10–14, 2006. The
meeting is sponsored by the Reactor Physics Division of the ANS and
co-sponsored by several international societies. The conference will be
held at the Hyatt Regency in downtown Vancouver.
You
are invited to visit the meeting website at http://www.cns-snc.ca/physor2006/
to obtain updated information and to download a copy of the call for papers. The
conference chair is Benjamin Rouben, FCNS Manager, Reactor Core Physics
Branch, AECL Sheridan Park (phone 905-823-9060 x 4550, fax: 905-822-0567,
email: roubenb@aecl.ca). The
technical program co-chair is Ken Kozier, Atomic
Energy of Canada Limited (AECL), Chalk River Laboratories, Chalk River,
Ontario, Canada K0J 1J0 (Phone: +1-613-584-8811 + ext.5059, email: physor2006@aecl.ca).
The 10th International
Symposium on Radiation Physics (ISRP-10) will be held at the University of
Coimbra, Portugal, 17–22 September 2006. This
event is organized jointly by the International Radiation Physics Society
(IRPS) and the Physics Department of Coimbra
University. The meeting is devoted to current trends in radiation physics
research and will include a series of plenary talks given by prominent
international researchers. The symposium in Coimbra is the latest in a series of
triennial symposia which began in Calcutta
in 1974 and continued in Penang (1982),
Ferrara (1985), Săo Paulo (1988), Dubrovnik (1991), Rabat (1994), Jaipur
(1997), Prague (2000) and Cape Town (2003). A
2˝ day Workshop on the
Use of Monte Carlo Techniques for Design and Analysis of Radiation
Detectors will be held immediately prior to ISRP-10 (15–17 September
2006).
More information on the Symposium, the
associate workshop, as well as on the venue, can be found at http://pollux.fis.uc.pt/isrp10.
The Twelfth International Congress on
Neutron Capture Therapy (ICNCT-12) will be held October 9–13, 2006, in
Takamatsu, Kagawa, Japan. The meeting is sponsored
by the International Society for Neutron Capture Therapy (ISNCT) with the
society president, Yoshinobu Nakagawa of the
Kagawa National Children's Hospital, acting as chairman of the organizing
committee. The meeting will focus on the many significant developments
that have been made in neutron capture therapy in biology, medicine,
chemistry, medical physics and engineering, and clinical trials. The most
up-to-date information can be found at the conference website: http://icnct-12.umin.jp/index.html.
The European Workgroup on MCTP (EWG-MCTP)
is sponsoring the First European Workshop on Monte Carlo Treatment
Planning, October 22–25, 2006, in Gent, Belgium. The conference theme
is “Introduction of MCTP into the Clinic.” The workshop will offer the
opportunity for scientists to exchange information, to develop new ideas
and initiate international collaborative programs on the exciting and fast
developing research domain of Monte Carlo
treatment planning. This workshop will also provide an overview of the
current state of the art to clinical physicists who are thinking of
introducing MCTP into their clinic.
The venue of the meeting is “Het Pand,” a former
Dominican monastery located in the historical centre of the city. The
oldest parts of the building date from the 13th century
and houses some valuable collections of the University such as the
Museum for the History of Medicine and the ethnographical and
archaeological collections.
Scientific sessions will consist of
general talks and poster presentations. The research topics covered will
be the following:
·
Industry – MCTPS
·
4D MCTP
·
General multipurpose codes
·
Dosimetry
·
Photon MCTP
·
Electron MCTP
·
Proton MCTP
·
Brachytherapy MCTP
·
Clinical studies
·
MC in optimisation
·
Portal dosimetry
Inquiries may be sent to N. Reynaert, Lab for Standard Dosimetry Gent, Gent
University –FANC, Proeftuinstraat 86 – B-9000
Gent, BELGIUM phone: + 32 9 264 66 48, fax: + 32 9 264 66 96, email: nick.reynaert@ugent.be. Details
and updated information can be found at http://www.ewg-mctp.ugent.be/.
The First International Conference on
Physics and Technology of Reactors and Applications (PHYTRA1), will be
held March 14–16, 2007, in Marrakech City, Morocco. This is the first
International Conference organized by the Moroccan Association for Nuclear
Engineering and Reactor Technology “GMTR” after a series of three national
conferences. The objective is to provide scientists and engineers from
different countries an opportunity to present their recent work in reactor
physics and nuclear technology. Industrial vendors may exhibit their
products and innovations in different domains related to reactor physics
and nuclear technology. The PHYTRA1 conference will also be a celebration
for the operation of the first research reactor (TRIGA Mark II) in
Morocco which is expected to be
commissioned in 2006.
Conference topics include:
·
Deterministic and Monte Carlo Transport Theory Methods
·
Reactor Core and Lattice Physics Methods
·
Physics and Computational Methods for Advanced Reactors
·
Reactor Theory and Reactor Concepts
·
Neutron Kinetics and Dynamics
·
Criticality and Safety Analysis
·
Fuel Loading Optimization and Fuel Design
·
Nuclear Data Analysis and Methods
·
Computer Codes and Benchmarks
·
Computational Methods for Research Reactors
·
High Temperature Reactor Physics and Methods
·
Reactor Thermal Hydraulics
·
Radioactive Waste Management
·
Research Reactor Utilization
·
Reactor Dosimetry and Reactor Shielding
A one-page abstract should be sent by
June 15, 2006, via email, to Pr. A. Jehouani, Faculty of Sciences SEMLALIA, Dept. of
Physics, University Cadi Ayyad- Marrakech Morocco (email: phytra@ucam.ac.ma or jehouani@ucam.ac.ma, fax :
212-44-43-74-10) or Pr. L. Erradi, GMTR
President, Mohammed V Agdal University, Faculty
of Sciences, Department of Physics, B. P. 1014 RABAT Morocco (email: erradi@fsr.ac.ma or fax:
212-0-37-77-89-73) http://www.ans.org/meetings/index.cgi?c=c.
The International Conference on Nuclear
Data for Science and Technology will be held April 22–27, 2007, in
Nice,
France. The
conference is organized by the Commissariat ŕ
l'Énergie Atomique
(CEA) under the auspices of the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA). The
General Chairs are B. Bigot, Haut commissaire
ŕ l'Énergie Atomique and L. Echávarri,
NEA Director-General. Abstracts should be submitted by September
2006 on the following topics:
·
Nuclear structure and decay data
·
Experimental facilities and detection techniques
·
Nuclear data measurements and analysis
·
Nuclear theories, models and data evaluation
·
Standards
·
Evaluated nuclear data libraries and processing
·
Validation, benchmarking of evaluated data
·
Integral experiments
·
Uncertainties quantification
·
Data dissemination and international collaboration
·
Fission energy applications
·
Accelerator-related applications
·
Fusion technology applications
·
Dosimetry and shielding applications
·
Safeguards and security
·
Space, cosmic-ray applications, radiation effects on electronics
·
Astrophysics and cosmology applications
·
Medical and environmental applications
The most
current information will be posted to the website at http://www-dapnia.cea.fr/Sphn/nd2007/site_nd2007/
and questions or comments may be addressed to nd2007@cea.fr.
The committee for the 13th
International Conference on Emerging Nuclear Energy Systems (ICENES 2007)
has issued a call for papers for the conference to be held September 2–7,
2007, at Gazi University in Istanbul.
The main objective of ICENES is to provide
a broad review and discussion of various advanced, innovative and
non-conventional nuclear energy production systems to scientists,
engineers, industry leaders, policy makers, decision makers and young
professionals who will shape future energy supply and technology. ICENES
2007 will also open the forum to innovative non-nuclear technologies, such
as hydrogen energy, solar energy, deep space exploration, etc. with an
emphasis on unthinkable ideas with a sound scientific-technical
basis. The program will include invited papers, submitted contributions in
oral and poster sessions, as well as an industrial exhibition and social
tours. Topical areas include:
·
Advanced Fission Systems
·
Fusion Energy Systems
·
Accelerator Driven Systems
·
Exotic Nuclear Reactor Concepts
·
Transmutation and Fuel Cycle
·
Co-Generation and Non-Electricity Production Applications
·
Generation IV Reactors
·
Space Power and Propulsion
·
Deep Space Exploration, general
·
Nuclear Hydrogen Production
·
Radiation Protection & Shielding
·
Hydrogen Energy, general including non-nuclear applications
·
Solar Energy
·
Other Alternative Energies
·
Societal Issues
The official language of the conference
will be English. Authors should submit abstracts of 300–500 words to abstract@icenes2007.org for
review by the Program Committee. Abstracts should include sufficient
information to explain and support the new and significant results to be
presented in the proposed paper. The topical area appropriate to the
abstract and the name and address of the author to whom correspondence
should be addressed must be clearly stated at the top of the first page.
Abstracts may be submitted in “pdf” or “doc”
format via e-mail by December 22, 2006. Authors will be notified by
February 23, 2007. The deadline for full papers is June 29, 2007.
The proceedings will be produced on an interactive CD-ROM with an ISBN
registration number. A selection of ICENES 2007 papers will be published
in a special edition of the journal Energy Conversion &
Management. Updated information will be posted to http://www.icenes2007.org/.
CALENDAR
February 2006
German Atomic Forum Winter Meeting, Feb. 8–9, 2006,
Berlin.
Contact: Anette Wiederhold, dbcm GmbH,
Conference Office WT 2006, Kamillenweg 16-18,
D-53757 Sankt Augustin, Germany. (fax 49-0-2241-9389712, email Annette.wiederhold@dbcm.de).
Waste Management 2006 (WM’06) Feb. 26–Mar. 2, 2006,
Tucson,
AZ. Contact: WM Symposia, Inc., P.O. Box 35340, Tucson, AZ
85740 (phone
520-696-0399, fax 520-615-8997, http://www.wmsym.org/).
March 2006
HEART Conference, March 6–10, 2006, Santa Clara, CA.
Contact: Technical Program Chair, Dennis Breuner
(phone 858-720-7072, email dbreuner@titan.com).
TopNux: Securing the
Future—The Role of Nuclear Energy, March 21–23, 2006, London, England. Contact: Dionne Bosma, ENS (phone 32-2-505-3054, fax 32-2-502-3902,
email Dionne.boxma@euronuclear.org).
23rd Short Course Series on “Modeling and
Computation of Multiphase Flow,” March 20–24, 2006, Zurich. Contact:
Prof. G. Yadigaroglu, Short Course Multiphase
Flow, ETH WEN B-13, Weinbergstr. 94, CH-8006
Zurich, Switzerland (phone: + 41 44 632 4615, fax: + 41 44 632 1105,
email: yadi@ethz.ch, url: http://www.ascomp.ch/ShortCourse/Short-Course.html.)
MCNPX Intermediate Workshop, March 27–31, 2006,
Cape Town,
South
Africa. Contact: Bill Hamilton (phone
806-928-6021, email bill@mcnpxworkshops.com, url http://mcnpxworkshops.com/).
April 2006
NCRP 2006 Annual Meeting April 3–4, 2006, Arlington, Virginia. URL: http://www.ncrponline.org/dates.html.
14th Biennial Topical Meeting of the ANS Radiation
Protection and Shielding Division, April 3–6, 2006, Carlsbad, New Mexico. Contact: Dr. Chuan-Fu Wu
(phone: 505-234-7552, email chuan.wu@wipp.ws) or Mr. Russell McCallister (phone 505-234-7395, russell.mccallister@wipp.ws)
http://www.ans-rpsw-carlsbad.com/.
Methods and Applications of Radioanalytical Chemistry (MARC VII), April 3–7, 2006,
Kona, Hawaii. Contact: B. Stephen Carpenter,
General Chair, National Institute of Standards and Technology, 100 Bureau
Dr., Stop 1090, Gaithersburg, MD 20899 (phone 301-975-4119) http://www.min.uc.edu/nuclear/marc/.
Two-day training course on neutron spectra
unfolding, April 7–8, 2006, Cape
Town, South
Africa. Contact: Burkhard Wiegel, PTB, email
Burkhard.Wiegel@ptb.de or http://www.ptb.de/utc2006/.
International High-Level Radioactive Waste
Management Conference (2006 IHLWM), April 30–May 4, 2006, Las Vegas, Nevada. Contact: Daniel B. Bullen, General Chair, Exponent, 185 Hansen Court, Suite
100, Wood Dale, IL
60191 (phone
630-274-3223, fax 630-274-3299, email dbullen@exponent.com) http://www.ans.org/meetings/index.cgi?c=t.
June 2006
ANS Annual Meeting, “A Brilliant Future: Nexus of
Public Support in Nuclear Technology,” June 4–8, 2006, Reno, Nevada. URL: http://www.ans.org/meetings/index.cgi?c=n.
MCNPX Introductory Workshop, June 12–16, 2006,
Santa Fe, NM. Contact: Bill Hamilton (phone
806-928-6021, email bill@mcnpxworkshops.com, url http://mcnpxworkshops.com/).
EXRS 2006–European Conference on X-Ray Spectrometry,
June 19–23, 2006, Paris, France. Contact: exrs2006@cea.fr, http://www.nucleide.org/exrs2006/.
September 2006
PHYSOR-2006, “Advances in Nuclear Analysis and
Simulation,” Sept. 10–14, 2006, Vancouver, BC,
Canada.
Contact: Ken Kozier, Technical Program Co-Chair, Atomic Energy of
Canada Limited (AECL), Chalk River Laboratories, Chalk River, Ontario, Canada K0J
1J0 (Phone: 613-584-8811 ext.5059, email: physor2006@aecl.ca, web http://www.cns-snc.ca/physor2006/).
Workshop on the
Use of Monte Carlo Techniques for Design and Analysis of Radiation
Detectors, Sept. 15–17, 2006, Coimbra,
Portugal.
Contact: workshop@lipc.fis.uc.pt (http://pollux.fis.uc.pt/isrp10/workshop/index.htm).
ISRP-10, Sept. 17–22, 2006, Coimbra,
Portugal. Contact: isrp10@pollux.fis.uc.pt
(http://pollux.fis.uc.pt/isrp10).
October 2006
First European Workshop on Monte Carlo Treatment
Planning, Oct. 22–25, 2006, Gent, Belgium. Contact: N. Reynaert, Lab for Standard Dosimetry Gent, Gent
University –FANC, Proeftuinstraat 86 – B-9000
Gent, BELGIUM (phone: + 32 9 264 66 48, fax: + 32 9 264 66 96, email: nick.reynaert@ugent.be, url:
http://www.ewg-mctp.ugent.be/).
November 2006
ANS Winter Meeting and Nuclear Technology Expo,
“Securing the Future in Times of Change,” Nov. 12–16, 2006, Albuquerque, NM. Contact: Robert W. Kuckuck
(phone 505-667-5101, email bobkuck@lanl.gov) http://www.ans.org/meetings/index.cgi?c=n.
March 2007
First International Conference on Physics and
Technology of Reactors and Applications (PHYTRA1), March 14–16, 2007,
Marrakech City,
Morocco.
Contact: Pr. A. Jehouani, Faculty of Sciences
SEMLALIA, Dept. of Physics, University Cadi
Ayyad- Marrakech Morocco (email : phytra@ucam.ac.ma or jehouani@yahoo.com, fax : (212) 44 43
74 10) or Pr. L. Erradi, GMTR President,
Mohammed V Agdal University, Faculty of
Sciences, Department of Physics, B. P. 1014 RABAT Morocco (email: erradi@fsr.ac.ma or erradi@hotmail.com, fax:
212-0-37-77-89-73).
September 2007
ICENES 2007, Sept. 2–7, 2007, Istanbul. Contact:
Prof Dr. Sümer Şahin,
Gazi University 06500 ANKARA/TURKEY (phone
+90.(0312).212.43.04, fax +90.(0312) 212.43.04,
email sumersahin@icenes2007.org, url
http://www.icenes2007.org/). |