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Dieter Hainz

Researcher at Vienna University of Technology

Publications -  6
Citations -  447

Dieter Hainz is an academic researcher from Vienna University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fukushima Nuclear Accident & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 405 citations.

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Tracking of Airborne Radionuclides from the Damaged Fukushima Dai-Ichi Nuclear Reactors by European Networks

Olivier Masson, +82 more
TL;DR: The measurements made across Europe following the releases from the Fukushima NPP reactors have provided a significant amount of new data on the ratio of the gaseous ( 131)I fraction to total (131)I, both on a spatial scale and its temporal variation.
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Artificial radioactivity in environmental media (air, rainwater, soil, vegetation) in Austria after the Fukushima nuclear accident

TL;DR: Air and rainwater and forward-trajectory analysis supported the hypothesis that the contaminated air masses coming from the northwest changed direction to northeast over Northern Austria, leading to a strong activity concentration gradient over Vienna, which appears to be unique.
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Airborne concentrations and chemical considerations of radioactive ruthenium from an undeclared major nuclear release in 2017

Olivier Masson, +68 more
TL;DR: The model age of the radioruthenium supports the hypothesis that fuel was reprocessed ≤2 years after discharge, possibly for the production of a high-specific activity 144Ce source for a neutrino experiment in Italy.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

GeigerCam: measuring radioactivity with webcams

TL;DR: By using image processing techniques, a current, only slightly modified, off-the-shelf HD webcam can be used to measure α, β as well as γ radiation, and this framework can classify the type of radiation and can differentiate between various kinds of radioactive materials.
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New Forensic Insight into Carl Auer von Welsbach's 1910 Observation of Induced Radioactivity: Theoretical, Experimental and Historical Approaches

TL;DR: Auer von Welsbach as discussed by the authors showed that one of the activated objects was a platinum-iridium crucible, and the dominating activation product of the crucible could have been iridium-194.